Columbus morning journal. (Columbus, Ohio), 1866-04-28 page 1 |
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TERMS OF ADVEUTlflllf CL Daily Om fqaere, each lDMrttoBw.H....mM 0 lb " iHdtl HvtioM r aar. mob iMM' Uobwhh tl : u , hoel nd BatiiMM Notice. Mr line. eaoh lDMrtloa.H.H....H..Mmww.M. 0 10 VwtiLT 0q Square, fclnrtioB. ...M1A0 LOCAl BDdBUflDVtl MouocMr lu. ;T :i , each utUob.. , 0 10 WDil Bqnare eoren tbree-qaarten of M tBOB i apeoe ia toe ooiamu oi in j oubh.au , Marrtag) HotlOM AOota., when noder fWe lloei. v Book and Job Prist!! neatly Bad promptly e an tea. Business Directory. DBAKRG, noKTIIH K A.torooe .(-Lew, XI amlto.' gn-ldtn.-, 07 Ho. Mishltt. j.Bir am flOX.C (1., plr Ib Fin. 7obaceo aa O'gars, V no. 77 Bonth liigh it. J.B1B sm nOWmi. K. H . rhiilcUl aad BoriroB, Mo. I V Op.ro H u.e Block. J.B1T If FOI'lHrAIH, W. W., Pbj.lcl.BBod SargMa. OtBo. to N.iixhton Bulldln;. JbbIiIv G ABUHRR, A., Jr.. Hotarj. Public, Johasoa Blork, 117 Bomb High it Jbb17 1 HUH H , VASJICIUrF titthbh, Manafectnrer. of TrBBBB end Valt..., Not. IM nil 1! 1 .'oath High HM JaalS Im TTBYL, Wl. Ij , Notary Pablle and JnetlMof AA TTII D. Hlgli.L.np. l.tK.ilonJb'k. Janl7 ly GOtlH JOURNAL. TERMS OP SUBSCBIPTIOI tWU or TAB B4ILT MVWA&. 9.Bli SabaorflMn. 1 - 8.01 ItaUatlBM LU. -J" tMogle Sabeertbe-, a Bioth, " " a Siucle f abMFibarA. l .. n """""" 2 Slug 1 fubseribtrak 1 B.h.' elTM-rT' NDIWDOOHriDMl, PW W It. Mllttmd ,,.,. 03 IO CNU pr JVR ch ONT, MSJM W BUB TBI-WBBELI MBMUL VOLUME ; XXVIII. Ji. c COLUMBUS,' OHIO, SASURDAY MORNING, APRIL 28, 1866. NUMBER 245. 1ZZ 1 Id 1 1 auatkJIZ: un or ran weaaxr ,ioo-.nAn. I oinle SobeOTtbert, per rv..... l r'r 1 1 BoaaBs..... lb. Pi.c, 7 "o-iib Hitn ilrnl, JnlT tm VTV II IHHO IK, I. A., Ol.lm Agenl, 117 Sonlb ' INUKMANN ., OoolMlToutt.nl l Uurl.anr Ainbu.1 BuiMiox, J..U If TJOLLAKDA BOWKM. arion. OItII Id X (Ineon no Bol Bl AooU, Mo. IS Wl 6iiY. & ttt wr Ttviic ,.r.Bd M B.ll Blt.lGIIDgt g I dbiiiidk. i.aif kj OHKM.F.JVriARUKK. H. '., Cl.lr. Aft'l, OfllTH, . n Pbfi'oBdl!arm Olot 9 ou Mt.te, E.itof Ftnrth. airgfllyr TAM.a A IIUK,T. W., Nol.rf Poblio "lalai A'l, Amboi' Bullillpfc lit B High it. )nl7 lf WARItKN A HIIJIOIV, Altointf auiaw, i.im is a m.rM. Forty years ago, Bt. Malo ponimed an alley known ny th nam or tba "Huelle Uoutanohei." Thu alley no Ion iter eziitf. ' haring been rtmoied for lha ImprovemenU oi nt town. It waa a iloubla row of housrt, leaDing ono lowara toe oioer, aua leaving bslween ' ' ' them juat room enough for a narrow ritu-let, which ill oslleii tbe alreet. By stretch ing tae legs It was possible to walk on both idea of the little stream, touohing with head or elbowB, as you went, the houses either on I lie right or left. Theee old relios of medfoTal Normandy have almoat ft ho- man interest. Tumble-down houses and soroerers alwavs iro toflreiher. Their l.an. Ing stories, their orer-hanging walls, their Doweu pont-nousea, and tbeir old thiok-set irons, seem like lips, clilos, noses and eyebrows. Tbo garret window is the blind ye. The wall is the wrinkled md blotohy oheek. The opposite houses lay their foreheads tegelber as if they were plotting some malicious deed. All those words of ancient Tillainy like out-tbroal,slit-woai-and, and the like - are closely connected With architecture of this kind. One of those houses in tbe alley the largest and tbe most famous or notorious was kuottn by the name of the Jjtores-- de. The Jacresssde was ft lodging-house for people who do not lodge. In all towns, and particularly in sea -ports, mere is always found beneath the lowest stratum of eociety ft sort of residuum: rttgubonils who are more than a match for juitioo; rovers after adventures; abemislsof the swindling order, ' who are alwnj'S dropping their Hvoa' fain into the melting pot; people in rags of every BBpe, ma every aiyie or wearing mem withered fruits of roguery; bankrunt axis tences; ooueoienoes Ihnt have filled their eobedule, gentlemen who have failed In the house-breaking business (for the, great masters oi Durgiury move in a nigber sphere;) workmen and workwomen in the trade of wiokedness; oddities, male and female; men (in coals out at the elbow; sooundrels reduoed to indigenae; rogues who have missed the wages of roguery; men who nave ootn nit in we social duel; harpies wno nave no longor any prey; petty laroen ere; giuiu in the double and unhappy mean' ing of that word. Snob, are the constitu ents of tbat living mass. Human intelli gence is here reduoed to something bestial. It is the refuse of the social state, heaped up in an obscure oorner, where from time to time, dusoendsthatdrcavled broom whioh Is known by tbe name of pollue. In St, Malo, Jaoressado was the name of that oorner. It is not in dens of this sort that wo find - the high-olass orimiuals the robbers, for gers, and olhor great produots of ignorance and poverty, if murder is represented here, it is generally in the person of some coarse drnnkaru: in tbe matter of robberv, the company rarely rise higher than the mere sharper. The vagrant is there, but not ine nignwayman. it would not, kow i' aver, he safe to trst this distinction. This . last stage of vagabonds may have its ex. " trainee or sooundrousm. it was on an occasion, when casting Ihsir nets into the Epi-scie which was in Paris what the Jaoressade was in St Malo that the police oapiureu tne notorious baoenaire These lurking places refuse nobody. To fall in the sooial scale has ft tendency to onog men io one level, sometimes honesty in tatters found itself there. Virtu ftnd probity have been known before now to be brought to strange passes. We must not judge always by appiaranoes, even in the palaee or at tbe galleys. Publio re- apeoi, as well as universal reprobation, require testing. Surprising results some times prooecd from this principle. An an. gel may be disoovcrrd in the stews a pearl in ine oung nui. ttuoo sad and danling aisooverita are not attogetner unknown. The Jaoretaide was rather court-yard than a house; and mote of a well than ft 1 eourt-yard. It had no stories looking on the street. Its facade was simply a high wall, Willi a low gateway. You raised the - - la'cb, pushed the gate, and were at onoe in - ine court-yard. : In the midst of Ibis yard might be per - oeived a round bole, enoiroled with ft mar-i gin of stones, and even with the ground Tiie yard was small, the well large. A broken pftvement eurrounded it. The court-yard was rqusre, and built round on three sides only. On the side of tbe street was only tbo wall; facing you as you entered the gateway stood the home the two wings of which formed tbe sides to rigbt and tort. Any one entering there after nightfall, at his own risk and peril, would have heard ft confused murmur of voices; and, if there had been moonlight or starlight enough to give shape to the obscure forms before his eyes, this is what he would have seen. The ocurt-yard the well. Around the oourt yard, in front of the gale, a lean-to, or shed, in ft sort of horse-shoe form, but with square corners; a rotten gallery, with ft roof of joists supported by stone pillars t unequal distances. In the center, the well; around the well, upon ft litter of straw, ft kind of oiroular ohaplet, formed of the Bolee of bools and shoos; eome trodden down at heel, some showing the toes of the wearers, some tba naked heels. The feet of men, women and ohildrcn, all asleep. Beyond theeo feet, the eyo might have distinguished, in the sbudow of the shed, bodies, dropping heads, forms strotohed out lazily, bundles of rags of both eexes, ft promiscuous assemblage, a strange and revolting mass of life. The aooommodation of this sleeping ohamber was open to all, at the ra'a of two sous per week. On a stormy night the rain fell upon the feet, the whirling snow settled on the bodies of those wretched sleepers, Who were these people ? The unknown. They oame there at night, and departed In the morning. Creatures of this kind form part of the social fabric Some stole in during the darkness, and paid nothing. The greator part had scarcely eaten during the day. All kinds of vioe and baseness, very sort of moral infection, every epeoies of distress were there. The same sleep settled down upon all in this bed of filih. Tho dreams of all these companions in misery went on side by side. A dismal meeting-place, where misery ftnd weakness, balf-sobered dehauohery, wearinesa from long walking to and fro, with evil thougbtr, in quest of bread, pallor with oloaed eyelids, remorse, envy, lay mingled and festering in the same miasma, with fooea that had the look of death, nod dishevelled hair mixed with the filth and sweepinga of th treets ness of th placa. They snatobi what Utile of themselves they could from the jaw of death. They closed their eyes in that oonfusion of horror wbiob every day renewed. They wen th embodiment of misery, oast up from society, ft th sount is rrom in sea. - It was not every one who aould even gel a ibare of th straw. More than on figure wa strttohed out naked upon th flag. rhev lay down worn out wit weariness and awoke paralysed. ' ine wen, witnont lid or parapet, and tntrty real in deptn, ranru open night and day. Rain fell around it: filth accumulated about, and th gutters or th yard ran dowa ana nitarea tnrouga its sides. The pail for drawing th water stood by tbe erne, .xnoa wao war tnirsty drank there: son, dugustM wl:h life, drowned themselves in it slipped from their clumber in th filthy shed in to this pro-founder sleep. la th year 1819, ih body of a boy, fourteen yean aid, was taken np out or tne well. . .nri. .1 1 To be safe in this home, it wa nossary to be or th "right sort, tn uninitiated were ngarded With soiplc'oi. 1 . Did thes miserable wretobes, men, know each other? No. Yet they .aoented out th genuine habitue of the Jaoressade. Th mistress or us ncuso waa ft young and rather pretty woman, wearing a aap trimmed with ribbons. She washed herself now and then with water from the wall. ouB Bin a wuvuon irg. f j At th break of day, th court yard os- oama empty. It inmates dispersed. An old oock and some other fowls wr kept in the Court-yard, where they raked among th filth or one pitoe an (ley long. A lone horizontal beam, supported by posts. traversed tbo yard a giooet-snaped erec lion, not altogether out of keeping with the associations of th place. Sometimes, on tbe morrow of ft rainy day, ft Silk dress, mudded and wet, would be seen hanging out to dry upon this beam, it belonged to me woman witn in woousn leg. 1 Over the abed, and like it, aurrcnnJicg th yard, wa ft story, and above this story, a lofi. A rotten wooden ladder, passing through t hole m tne roor or tn abed, con ducted to this story; and up this ladder the woman would olimb, sometimes ataggering wbile its crsiy rounds oreaked oentfttb her. ine occasional lodgers, wnetner by the week or the nighl, slept in thai oourt-i yard; the regular inmates lived in the bouse, 1 . Windows without a pane of glass, door- irame wnn no door, nic-niacos without stoves suoh wsre th chief features of th interior. You might pass from ono room to the other indifferently, by a long ' snuare aperture whioh had been the door, or by a triangular hole between the Joists of the partition. The fallen plaster of the ceiling lay aoout tne noor. 11 was dimcuit to say now. tne old nous sun stood eraot. The high winds indeed shook it. The lodgers asoenaed ss iney eouia by tbe worn and slippery aleps of the ladder. Everything was open 10 me air. ine wintry atmos phere was absorbed into the house, like water into a sponge. The multitude of spiders seemed to guarantee the plaoe against fall ing to pieoea immediately. Thero was no sign of furniture. Two or Ihrea pailasses were in me oorner, tneir ticking torn in parts, and showing more duet than straw within. Here and there were a water-pot and an aaruen pipkin. A olose, disagree able odor haunted the rooms. - - Tbo windows looked out upon the square yard. The scene was like the interior of a scavenger's cart. Tha things, not to apeak of th human beings, which lay meting, moidering, ana pntrnying mere, war indescribable. The fragments seemed to fraternise together. Some fell from lha walls. others from the living tenant of th place. The debris was sown with their tatiers. Beside, tha floating population which bi vouacked nightly in the square yard, the Jaoressade had three permanent lodgers a obarooal man, a rag pioker, and a "gold maker." Tha oharsoal man and tha rag picker oooupied two of the pailassea of the first story; the "gold maker," ohemiat, lodged in the loft, which was called, no one knew why, tha garret. Nobody knew where the woman alept. The "gold maker" wae a poet in small way. lie inhabited ft room in the roof, under th.tilu aoham-bor with ft narrow window, and a large stone fire place forming a gulf in Which the wind howled at will. The garret win dow having no frame, ho had nailed; aorose it a pieoa of iron sheathing, part of the wreck or a abip. this sueatbing left aula room for the entrance of light, and much tor tha entrnnoe .of oold, Tha obarooal man paid rent from time io time ia the shape of s saok of obarooal; the rag-picker paid with ft bowl of grain for th fowls very week; th "gold maker" did not pay tll. Meanwhile, the latter consumed the very house itself for fuel. H had palled own th little wood-work whioh remained: and every now and then he took from the wall or the roof a lain or soma sosntling, to heat his orucible. Upon tha partition, above the tbe rag nioker'a mattress, might have been seen two oolumns of figures, marked in chalk by the rag-picker himself from week to week a column or threes, ana a column or fives aooording as the bowl of grain had cost im throe iiards or nvo oentimes. xne gold- pit of tha "chemist" was an old fragment of a bomb-shell, promoted by him to the igniiy of a orucible, tn whioh he mixed ingredients. The transmutation bf met als absorbed all his thought. He wa de termined not to die nntil he hsd revenged himself by breaking the windows of ortho ox soienca witn ma real punouonner s one. His furntco consumed ft good deal of wood. The hand-rails of th stair had disappeared. The house was slowlyi burn ing away. The landlady eaid te hint, "iou will leave nothing but the shell." , lie mollified her by addressing her in verses. Such was the Jaoressade. I . ; , A boy of twelve, or, perhaps, sixteen for ha was like dwarf, with a large wen upon is neck, and always carrying a Broom ib is hand was tbe domesuo or tbe plane. The habitues entered by the gateway the court-yard; the publio entered by the P. What was this shop 7 In th high wall, facing the street, and to the right of the entranoe to the court yard. was a square opening, serving at ono as a oor and a window. It bad a abutter and a ma the only shutter in all tha bousa hich had hinges and bolts. Behind this uare aperture, wbion was open u the street, was ft Utile room, ft oompartniontob-tained by curtailing tha sleeping shed in the court yard. Over tha door, passers by read the inscription in charcoal, "Curiosities sold here." On three boards, forming tha shop front, were several pots without ears, a Chinese paraaoi made of gold-beater's and ornamented wiib ngurea, torn heto and thera, and impossible to open or u'; rragment or iroo, and ahapeless ieoes of old pottery, and dilapidated hats d bonnets; inreeorroorstieiis, soma pack ets of old bona and metal buttons, a lobao- 00 box with ft portrait of Marlc-Antolnetle, a dog'a-eared volume of Boisbvrtrand! Al gibri. Suoh waa the atock of the shop; this assortment oompleted tbe "curiosities." lha ahop commanioated by a baokdoor with the yard in whioh waa the well. It waa furnished wiih a table andsiool. Tha woman with a wooden leg presided at the counter. , Sunday Heading.- THBEK WtlBDS OF IB,KGTU.. - There ar. IhrMl'Mons I woald write ' Thrt. words, as With a baraiog pen, la traclog of .Ureal llg'Jl, . 4 DpoBtB.hrtsofai.n. ' f . i OavsBoptl Though olends environ ronnd, A ad gladaew hides atr the. Io to jra, ' ' Pat thoa the shadow from tby brow Ho night bat hath Its mora, i', 1 - , Bav. frith I Wk.ra'.r thy betk It drlmi laeeilm's disport, tht.aipMt's m:rta . Know thil, Ood rnlts tb. host ol btavaa, TbeiohabllsBts ofearth. VavoLovsl Hotlov. a loot tor 001 i : Bat n.B, at man, thy brother oall, Aod tuttir, Ilk. tha slrclliigraa, ' Thf chanties 01 til. . . .TbM gran tbtt. !mobi oa tby toul- Bop, ralth aid Lova-andUioaiball Had Bt.e ogth wbaallfa't surges indstl roll, ,'t I'ght wht.ihja.lt.w.rlb iadi .1. SoHillbb. There were in China, last year. 187 mis sionaries, inobiding women. Of these nlaely-two are Amerloans, seventy-seven are English, and eighteen are German. A lingular ineident has taken nlaaa at Neuohatal in Swilierland. . At the death of merchant in that oilv. on tba credit aid. 01 lis doom tn name of "Ood" waa found to be insoribed for ft considerable sum. No one knew of such a oreditor, and on investigation evidence was obtained that deceased, who wa a man of great piety, had opened an aocount to the Father of All, and entered to it each year a share of his profit. The olergy have olaimed the sum on tha ground that they represent Ood uoon earth. while their demand ia onnnsed bv tha authorities of tha oanton. log man, wo must have no such representative toasts as Mayor Wither', and ft better exhibition from the Southern pulpit. - On of th f outhern religion- paper apeak of A. il. Stephana' views, ftnd the faot of his alcotion to th United State I Senate, as evidence of tha improved ton of publio sentiment. Wa hail auoh sentiment (a his with- intense satisfaction. But is has bean alwaya regarded aa ft Union man I at heart, believing in th abstract right of Secession, but denying it expediency un der any (listing oiroumslanots. mere ar obvious reason why suoh ft man, with hi vast polit'cal influence, should hie selected by th Legislature of Georgia to rep resent tha State in tha United Slataa Sen- I ato. It ia ftlso a good sign. And because wa have honestly undertaken to advocat th right of loyal Union man ! iota in I Congress, and th duty of Contrail to ox- Iolud all others, w shall be glad to have testimony to th existence and growth of a sentiment of earnest devotion to that Government whioh ia to ba tha only power I said nobleman to ft talkative person who w ruio till, wiia wbiiv mv biuvi lit v.. I w . .;i,jn.n.. 1, ; .,jH i.i.j.j . But we know that tba present generation I , .., 1 will nss. .... and a Tew n.ratin will 'J. ffhti the gabbler, "wa are ao orowd- lake their placet, before tha South will ba ad at tha tabl that I da not Personal and Miscellaneous. TELEG ft A PHI ft tiBBAT THOUGHT). Who ou Black, gnat thoughts I Tbsy stls. apoath.Mlad 1 amst and search, Aad shah It 1 bow Ih. toll Mlad aa by wiad j Both onr It like rlv.rt ovw nads. . Whlea gnaw la th. oarnat 1 tars at told, Aad pel., aad volMlavt ; Ivevtog in th. brain A rocking aad a rlagtog glorloat, But momentary, stadaois Might It last. 1 '.. Fasni. A counlry editor describe th eollpie of I th moon 11 beautiful and total." REPORTED FOR THE JOURNAL. Afternoon Dispatches. FROM PORTLAND, HE. Tha Fanlnmsllefiirnlnt Bailor en ske Teaael. PoiTLixn, April 27. si. Th Spottswood Hons signed him ft I iitrg. .uus 01 rooms, tno naiiara lloua offered to do the earn., and every op vied ti coniritut labia aemfort and pltasura. us umu ubov witn uen. 7 urnar, tempera rily commanding. He visited Ft. Harrison and other point of interest and return wen pieaaea witn m visit. FROM SAN FRAJKOI9CO. Telr;rpb4aarrl-Mlnlagr Block. 8m FaAHCttco, April 26. Tha California Stat Telegraph Company BOOKS. asooim tatloiieir'sH H. BIIBT ' WhoUaal aad Bttafi ' BOOKSELLERS & STATIONERS Xo. 199 South Hikh Street, VKIOH BLOSf, ' Oolumbua, Ohio. Oonitantly on hand all th. loading Tbe steamboat New Brunswick arrived 'o-day served an Injunction on th United I L&W, M fdic&l AOd Schwvl BMfJ frnm RhIh-wI tki. mamIii. will. 9HH P- I Slat P.flifirt T.I.P&nh fn-r. n m tn n I f A man oomplalned of hi daughter's ex-1 sns on board. On leaving for Boston, ssv- nt th latter from doing business between U-vaganoe, because she persisted in buying . "- K" b " ! behind. "ain pomuj in California. a waUrfall f k.r b.arl wb.n .h. . "" ur.) -.. ibuibub, --- , . "r- . ... . . wno W(r6 ,poiliDt for , ggkt, drew u,, ,mi, io; imperial, 140; .Empire Mill, 185; v. ..v. wu.u. urova . piatoia on tno omcers and obliged tna boat rmu, nuu; uavage, iwoo; (jbollar that. - " toputbaok. Soma of tba ringleaders war oioai, 01 1, ana renow Jaoket, ?86, rut asnore and sent on by rail, and th boat "Your hand ...oy. m. .xca.di.gly," J JXd .t 9 ." c.c'.k" 1 not know where Io represented in Congress, if in public meet-1 ings Jeff. Davis continues to be toasted aa I patriot, and th minister of th Uospel fos- tr unfriendliness to the Government of the I Union. It is in the power of the Christian people and the ministers of tha Gospel to make I FROM JKKW YORK. Tlio Mew Tork Cwn.rrwilonal Daleara-lion en Recontliactlsa. Niw Yobk, April 27. Tbe Times' special say th. meeting and I action of the New York Congressional dele, gallon, last evening, with refereno to th put my hand.' "Put it ia your mouth" said th nobltman. Th lata Judge P , of Connecticut, was not remarkable for quickness of apprahen- au,itlon 0f reconstruction, has . been the lion. At ft ocrtain time, Hoi. H. W. Shar-1 eubieet of mnch comment to-dav. and ha .0 1 -. , .... . ohanga in this publio sentiment. Not BB w" r'n sa before him, and, In oreaua oonstueraoie surprise among the merely by aooepting tbe issue of war. not th eonrs of his argument. Mr. S. mad a ...... """ " -"Bjoruy by submission to lha inevitable oulv. bulbv noint -M.fc .1,. i..j a:a ' . 01 ln" 'eg"on u .'o 'avor forced rallying around tbo flsg of our common Z" i . ... . negro sutfrage in any event. country, sustaining, heart ftnd hand, the "'. wouia tnank you to state Union of tha States as tba greatest oivil Pint 80 tBat 1 n understand you." bteesing, and ainving to perpetuate this I Bowing politely, Mr. S. replied in his bland- FROM DETROIT. I Railroad Depot aad Teaael Destroy! Ditxoit, April 27. Th passenger ftnd freicht denot of tha Detroit & Milwaukie ftnd Miohigan Southern railroads, and the ferrv steamer Wind sor wer destroyed by fin itat night. A fall and eompUt. assortment of Blank Books and Stationery, rrr, n A IV U IAMB. ' " ovn r, nn, - - W1MIOW All A DM. ' PAIMTIiSM, 1-' rUrfVHtm aad " PICTUKIirilAHeS, wbolaaala aae) KaUiU. LITHOtlRAPHI-O, JOB rAUNTl-e aab Bismna. ,r OOBBtvOfflML n.llrnarf. lUnh. .-J nM. ..ul-. ...viiir-i, BiBra-aM LEAD WORK8. COOKING STOVES. OHIO Pure White Lead I P-EZCEIBirZ .11-: . its coming will be the morning of the a .I..,... I ut'KUwpb ji sunt until uahrruvui uu ion ibuu wuvr iMiB in naoti or asking bar ,ia0 the lath of April, 18B1. JVw York Tba following is th substanco of th. proposition, which wae recsived with tha greateat favor by the meeting: bu... . . 1 1 11 O.t ....... .IV. I. . 1.... . U....UH.H..Ul.UltUl.lOBBing thi spirit yei;butwa watoh for it mora ..... r .i. . T V represenUllon upon population, and pro- than thay who watoh for th morning. For ta"k lm "poting upon viding that whenever any Slate denies suf- . . . . . I mb f I fra xa (a anw ala tit iiii.ana t TTaa XtmA "ft v w vaoars vi viiiaiua vi vua uuiwn Small boy, on lip-to., Io his companions h. the rebellion, auoh disfranohiaed class. ohildren before they retired at night, what Obttrvtr ' , "80 slop your noise, all of you." Compan- or portion, shall bo deduoted from the basis lhay had dona to make others happy, found , ',. . ions "Hellol Tommy! what is th matter?" of representation. her two twin daughters eilenl. The ques- 1 - Sm.ll hn u.i . . . .., Beoond A constitutional amendment pro- tion was repeated. "I oan remember loth- ho Nalloaal Onuw of Ball. , boy- W.vgol n.w baby-it s hibiting th. pay ment of the R.bol debt, and ing good all this Hay, dear mother: onlv The tihvslaua of Americana ha. Inn. ! wy wk ftnd tired -walked all tha way providing that there shall naver be 00m- ooe of my sohool-mates was hannv henaiii.. I a vnlnarahl. mini fnr ih. ii.ir. nf rn. I from heaven last night musn't ba kicking- nensation for emancipated slaves. she had gained the head of the olass, and I aign.rs on the weaknesses of our oountry- up ft row round hero now." Third As part of the plan of reslora- smiled on her and ran Io kiss her; so she men, and hitherto wo have too well deserved n lIc" " ia proposed that whenever these said I was good. That is all, dear mother."- thes. palpable hits from our healthy cut- At Durham Assises a deaf old lady, who amendments be ratified by a sufficient num- The other spoka still more timidly: "A lit- rfoor-sport-lovina- oousins of England. Of had brought an notion for dama.oa ao-aln.t har of States to make them a part of the tie girl, who sat with ma on the bench at lata vin. hnwavar. an linnrnv.m.nt I,.. l. i-i.i.-- i. . . Constitution, then each of tha rebellion. . ...... 1 ' 1 - , - a udi uoimuur. uu Dflint .nninnn. ...ni. . ..... i eonooi, nas lest a little brother. I saw that been manifested in this oountry in this I ,l , , . . , ' " Stales shall be entitled to ths admission of while -she studied her lesson aba hid ho. r.nni n,l m. r.r.m.iin h.. h... i-i. I juig suggested a compromise, ftnd In-1 it Representatives, on their takinv tha ... face in her book and wept. I felt sorry, duoed whioh bids fair to be of great kens fit ,ltl th. oounsel to ask what she would quired oath of office. and Uidmyfaoeonlhesam.bookandw.pt in permanently removing this just oause of I lak. to settle th. matter. "Hii lordship I Fourth The following class of persons with her. Then she looked uo and waa ceuaura. and in lirimnna-iminin th. nh.ai. I , ... . ... . . I to be forever debarred from holdinn- office comforted, aod put her arms around my oal standard of our forefathers, whoseTwell- ". , T wnaiyou will nr ftskcu und.r (h, United BM. Th, f,,,!,,, neck: but I do not know whr she aaid I bad aiarniaail mn.nl-. an.hi.ri ih.n. in 1.. ,h. 'be learned couusol, bawling a. loud ft! he and Vic. President, heads of danarlmanta. done her good." "Com. io my rms, my foresls of th. nilJ.rnesi low. and whose """la " & lady's .ar. "I thank his members of Congress, and Judges of the pr.T.m..t. .iViX im.nniZSta. darling, said th. mother; " to rejoioe with powors of endurance led them to withstand lordship kindlr " answered tha ancient Supremo Court of the Confederate States, sboobb vasa from .xpMlr., .r oiberwli Pstmleaai OouklQK HleT.1. fnrnl.hfld wllh on..h.M of HBO, rats, a.kiog nf inch pertoa a rtBiiA-bbnt ITOOBHOLUBB Ib th. Uomp.oy, th.r.bf aot oulf gotllLg buk .T.nto.llf th. fab valvs of th. tOCk, h.t all PI.POBVIOHATI BIV1BBBDS Bl loUg Bt lh O'-Bipany n-maiBt ao org.B'Bt ob. Hootl B SAM Bod ICBB IBTBtlHIKV, Altboagh small to .oh ladlrldotl, hts aev.r Dufor bm of ft-r.dtolb.pBbU . Beroeaob .look-holder g.u a St.. for SSA.th.t la OB...... .L.i.n ml, Thil proposition was not formally adopt- I na Qf iobib ibbb bbj ou.1 or wood ttorr.; b.tidM, Petroleum Stove Oo. White Lead A Color Works JAilT AL Hfl'IM'It, BOO.eOO. 10,000 Shares, each t ; t $30 ROUT. SHIELD?, l'realdsal. J. B. DAOIIE, tlecrl tary. THB OHIO rBTBOLEUat STOVB COMPANY is org.Biaed oailar th. lawa or tb. gtau of Ohio, for Ih. pnrpOBaof glrlag to tba pablio .11 1st those who rejoioe, and weep with thos.who so manfully the fatigues of the great seven dam. "and if it. .. ii.. , fc. th'' roproientatives at foreign oourte, all weep, ie to obey our blessed Redeemer." I I'll I uke a littl. team altf" persons who left oifioial positions under the United Siates Government to aid in the re- years' struggle for independence. Tha ani-ii a ... m- I Among llio most influential causes of this Rev. H. M. Tuoper. a tradu.t. of N.-in. deairable reformation has bsen tne .stab- Th, .. hort. ,,,. . bsllioo, all who served in the rebel army Sominarr na ... . i.i..... .1. liohment of a national out-door sport, soma- I . . " r ' B ' aoov. me rank or uoionoi or in the navy rreedmen organised humble and and now a miinn. i lii liohment of a national out-door sport, some- ,. . ', , , r ' --., aoov. me rank or uolonoi or in the navy of Raleigh vrrltee thlt he ha. tnil" we w,te not P"""d "f lat. """'"'"g M. Cabinis, ft French physiol- above tha rank of master, and all persons ft regular Baptist Church of most " ,ea year g0, 0f 00urM our porlB ''- l'b muscles of th. leg. and arms guilty of treating cur prisoners oonlrary to id faithful Christians. He says: "' """"""j of foreign origin, as loss their power before thos. whioh support lbV!1.Io, of w."- ' . , , ., . . tra the .nnr a nt Knr.ti.nr) nf H.m.n ..J ........ vv This nroooSltlon Was not formallv adnnl "We have nurohaaed a buildln. lnt In pleasant part of the oily. I have advanoed in. money to pay for it, my savings while a soldier. Some on. must make tha aaorifioa. and I am on th. field, sea tha need, and cannot withhold. Wa ahall at onoa oom-menoe the work of building a Churob. I labor on boldly, trusting in God. endeavor ing to ehow to all that my work is one of love, inisconrse nas softened the hearts am uit ipont oi jugiana ox florman ana I ,i, i... . , , . , iiiwyuouiuu hh uu. .uruiuy buudi- i 7-- . V..,UM h ..k... .:.i. """t and these last sooner than the l.ri i,i it ... .....h ih.t n ,k.i,ik. hi. stock that ...nf.iiT mB.iKiiat a r.i.p.t.i ...,;,.,,u, n . u .,.. . . ... ... ..... " J " '.T -"-T. " " OB. Tbb Btof. ltaalf. In loot Ih. Ltreat of tb. nu.wi. luuimi vuo uaua B11U UO 11- BUUICU IO IBB reOOnStrUOUOU COmmilie. aa whole Oamn.nv. I. diffaMd thrnn.hnk .w.r.Tnwn. Iustrs.es this by th. case of persona who phat which would be generally acceptable ship la tbe wbole sui., and it. praotioai workiog r I ,.. .u. v x- . dallv wttBMHd bv .T.rv m.oiber or th. Do. sleeponhore.back.orwhll. they areatand- , B ., Thlt lndBcemaBt br ttw-k iav.taieBt of oonm ina- or walklno- Ha nnnn.i... .h.. .... .. '"H . vgni auurago ooaut a - -... lion, either lmmediata for our national gam. of base ball, as nlav- sd in aooordano. with the rules of th. "National Association of Base Ball Players," an originality as an Amerioan institution, as th. English can for their peculiarly nation- UNDKBRIdNID HAVINfl BOOnHTLT CUrehBMd ths Wni. I...n ITn... known t th. work, of MiBtrt. Bantam, Bills A Co., but mora lewutlp aa ib. PLoauli,WhlU bat and Oulor Worka," wonldr.ll th. attention of Deal-on and P.tnt-ra to oar rllOSNIX BUAHO or POBB WHITK I, HA 11, which I- '-.log n.d. nndar tb.MMo,.l aaperr-aloa of Mr. Bllt. wlto h.a had .n exp.rl.qot of iwenly.flve jearl io th. bibbb-faoior. of Lbap, and wt tuo maker of Ih. brand ao long and favorably known aa "Hariieos, Bills A Oo V Pa Wliiu ii-ad. W. thar.fi-r. M coo. Hd.Bt nl b. 1 g able to rurlth dvalvrt and ooaaam-on with. a attioleof . ' rUUE WHITE IJKAO which bll hne no laperlor, either I American or KoK'iafa mtnuftiotiir. , ., tvror bjr Ueftlrri In PIn (eavrkllf. ECKSTiiltf, IlILL-v sic CO., NO. B BURNKT sr., " " aptSriliB oaro.a I.Vt'l IV W ATI. BAKfeRY. np remota wa. pa. al sporl of borse-iaing. Without further i MnM 01 "8nt leeP "''. then the sense of oeived with very little favor, disoussion on this point, however, let it suf-1 taste, next smell, and, lastly, that of touch. I The question of th. immediate admission fics that th. gam. 01 bsae ball, aa perfected I 1 ..... u j ,. ' Tannease. waa not discussed, but such of some who were bitterly opposed to n at of Iat y'"' ia an American game, and one ,. , uu PPoa- member, as expressed themsalves at all the beginning " V PF oan honorably claim as our national out- UoB to n En8ll1' "".atrioal manager for ware decidedly in favor of it. U-tgrnSili,. I J . ' I . . 1 TT . ,, 1. ta nnrla.e.AA1 h.. .1.... . .1.. uuv. Dltuil. - - ...HntMUl. AAB WB. B.K.U II 110 OOUld ' IUIM Wft Ul. U1UD. As oriokot Thonghla for tba Afflicted. tM IV. V It.l . I I . .. . ni-nmtn.nl nl tUm uu..lM..l.. I A Christian was under manifold trials I base ball become to the AmtrintD In En. I "..la. Fr.nch, ad to - 1 , . . I UOtJ UttU UOUU1DS and aflliciions; and on on. oocasion, to a ind oricket has ", !,.".," . r. oouJ0Iln-s wim mm, n. re- any pastim. known to th. English people. ..vnotnoioiiowing cneot: On the cricket-field, and there only, the I look around, and I see how manv thara .... ..j .1 ...... 1 . . . at Uvwl MAAIA .1 1 VI IIHUDBUIi UlDtJb VU BUUII IVl lilli rh!.i7 n .T "Jy Ii.t.d the possession of courage and nerve, judg- than myaelf. Ilook,.ta,n,nd I aee how ment and skill, endurance and activity muoh corruption there ia in mv heart, wh nh .1 ,u2 . ,i , ,. , ... , , ,-. . t 1 ..vu. B n Luw tim u. BWU.riwri'jr. lu S,d,to b.', moJlM n? wh'l t"yoUl faot, more democratic institStion does not us iwi, a iuua ttvvmwa'a. ana i mn tn&t. i : a j t.i n .1.1 1 c 1 . . ."ha0.,1"""''"0li "? Popularity, the reo ... . . , . .... i.u.iw u, nuu I see that God whose hand overrules all ttvonta, and who doth all thing, wll.ly and wo... a iook oocwufora, ana 1 see rrom bow many troubles ha has delivered me, and how many sharp afflictions be has made to work together for my good. I look fmuard, 9 AOlVriOBU. 1U -ng- I .!.. , . , , , wu-utHi. rtti. u.ajv .u urupu.lllUll, VIBi ardent follower, than " Ti' tB.""" "' ht could, h. Senator Harri. and Representatives Cank- nuuoa in aiuiuut, ana reou.a m. follow- ling ana itoutweil, ing, which bears a hideous resemblance to " Kxeontlve Na.alon Deoaplla-th. soliloquy of th. Duk. of Gloster: loa Oame Bloekad Interesting Ba- "Now It th.wlat.rof nnr dl.nn... . .. DTOI-B. Th. Frenchman rendered 11: The Tribune's special says: The state- N.w....viBt.,ofoBrd.mn..,-. ment is whispered about this evening that Btad. lato hot vaddar. bv tt roa of Tork : (!!tt Is vat yon Mil se lltt.l. boy of Bltttr Tork) confl, a. ionua B m lop Bed aad taried at ai bottom, I ha Km,, am m. b.flk: eanaot b. off red lDd.flait.lv bv tha OomuanT.for wbea It it 000. all r.k.a, lonljra llmf tl BUmbor of tBarat ttoiug that ooeroo) fas win thoa bay the d.utb .ion., Tho wlahlog th. 920 In stook with their Ptove. shoold toad ln thalr ord.r. .t onoa, Moo.y m -y ba .aa . .0. riaa o. .u. UOBPHJ, ar All BIOTts Warranted. Offica aad 8.1. Bjoat No. lit North Blgh ttrett, v.innt.n. nut. 1 pgent. waBted. Bend ttamp for circular.1 febtlln J. B. DAQUf. Beo'y. the Senate, to-day, in executive session. disoussed soma other matters than military confirmations, whioh were passed upon without opposition. If rumor ie to he credited, the majority of tha Eon.'- tinniij. .nnonnoed ih.w no nomination orda of tho thousands of games played eaoh year, whioh includes tha names of lords as ar.ll a.,, nt nnlir. (li.i.ia. - i.ll lawyers; legislators as well as artisans, and "aoy itgi , ana tor iu should be oonnrmed, when made to fill a literateurs as mechanics and peasants, "dogshow-vow-v.wat roe plaoe made vacant by removal for opinion's ehow how greatly it has taken hold af that venivaikbyhla. al of any oompetent oflicar, who sup- ....i. rf .hi. 1. ,1.. For an extemnnrananiiB tpnn.l.ltnn ih!. . i .u. .1 . i . ..t t . . th lir Ji I ul' 1D . kum 1. .u. uu.iauHiia.ig ui I . putmi .u. .ivu.iuu u. Auunw nuuuoua in .....,li u i 1 :, , "".",'". "uu oriokot in ansiooratio England, how muoh was oonsiderod good, but h. waa not en- th. last Presidential oanvaBB. Tho Senate .,B. 1..... is oon- mora wiu it mark bass bail in d.mocratio gaged . v,lus "to, .uu .ui- wuiou, uj inose amtO' I America? lions, he is papering me. And when I have looked in all these directions, I do not think much of my afflietione. Let mo also well consider suoh text aa these: "Whom the lord loveth he chaatan-elh." Heb. 18 : 8. "Wa must, through snoh tribulation, enter into th. kingdom of God." Act. Id : 22. "Christ also suffered for us, leaving us an example that ye ehould follow iu his steps." 1 Peter 2: 21. , she r Tbe Admission of Utah. The Chisago Timn is wrathy, sharp and funny. It fisilea out in ft take-off thus : Tba people of Utah have applied for admission a. a Stat. Th. proper Congressional oomniittee ha th application before it, and la taking teaiimooy with referenoe to il. It i. quit, probable that th. people of Utah will not be admitted without a "change of heart." Utah will find th. road into th. Union t long on. to travel! " 1 ; ; ilrigham Young Win b. requested to r- peiygamy oy legal nudiata nelygamy by legal enactment. Snob was th. pulrid heap of life Afler this shall be don. h. will be required fermenting in this dismal spot. An un lucky tarn in the wheel of fortune, a ship arrived on Ih. day before, a disoharge from prison, or th. dark night, or some other banc., had past them here, to find a miser, able shelter. Every day brought some n.w , aoenmulation of suoh misery. Let him enter wto would, aleep who oould, apeak who dared; for it waa a plaoe of whispers. Tbe new-comers hastened to bury themselves iu th. mass, or trtsd to sesk oblivion )n sleep, sino. th.r. was none in th. dark- to repent of polygamy. Then will b. a oommittee at Washington who will go over him thoronghly. - H. will be required to testify that polygamy is abolished. H. will find it neoeesary to show that he a.v.r did believ. in polygamy. lis will b. ntoessi-tated to prove that there are no men in Utah who aver did believa in polygamy. Afler this has been dona, Utah will be admitted by tha present Congress, providing there are abundant guaranties that it will vote tbe Abolition uoxer. Progress r Loyal Feeling. W. watoh with anxiety, th. manifeata-tiona of Southarn feeling toward lha Gov ernment of tha United States. It is well Unrefleoling and prejudiced individual, who naver look below me aurfac. of things, may regard both oricket and base ball as "very good things for boys, perhaps, " or "Io pass away an idle hour or two on holli-dny;" but those who intelligently inreeti-gale subjects in regard to cause ftnd effect see in both these games, but espeoially in base ball, th. means to an and which had been sought for in vain for years past on mis side tne Atianuo. as a means or pbysi-oal cultivstion base ball is one of the most commendable in vogue. As a remedy also for many of th. evils aaoruing from th. immoral assooiatione the youths of our oities "CI T1X BleHTS" IM MARYLAND. The National Amerioan, published at Bsi Air, Harford oounty, Md., relates th. fol lowing: Alexander Riot, an industrious and res- New York. fieotabl. colored man of our county enlisted oases after one week's delay, and a report n the army and went to the war. He of 'he oase may b. expected by tbe Ccm- served his oountry faithfully, and in due mitteo to-day, but nothing was said by tims was honorably discharged. With that Sonator Morgan, and as there is no meet. is bound to sustain tbe President's earliest and best frisnds and supporters. New Tork Collertorablp. In the Senate, Mr. Morgan being on the Committee on Commeroe, when the oase of Dir. Bmyto. oam. up for action, was refer red to Gov. Morgan, as the Senator from It ia oustomary to report baok J. M. STUART & CO., Hannfutanri A Wholttal. and Bttall Onlan la Tin, Oojp jper, And Sheet-Iron Wa e ! Alto, Dealen la LAW'SON'S HOT AIR FURNACES, ,i,nl a,,-., Ormtei. Whlto Hsrbl ni HhlAlBM Hi an. Iron MutlM, o., o.j aod gala AgioU for P. P. 8tewrt' Largs Otod, Alr-TlgUt , COOHIISGt STOVE, And th. Noted AIiIsiaATO COAL COOKING 8T0VB. aurSeod ly BAMY & CONFECTIOiNERY. i I, . t ITlieo. Joiich, Wholesale ct Retail Dealer In BREAD, CRACKERS, ",' - CAKES, CANDIES, '( FRUITS, JvCTS.Ac. BJKERY & COSFmiOMM - tio. 2S8 Ronih High at., febST ta , Oolumbua- O. TRANSPORTATION. HOCKINO VALLEY Transportation Line. T BI-WEEKLY LINB IBOH COLUMBUS TO Lanoaattir. Laj.n. hal.ona.lla. Ilr..nr... BBd Afuuni at d all polott ob tb. Booking Oaoal. This Lino is oompoaed ul FIRST O Ia A 88 BOATS. Built exm-MsIr fortlta trade, ui Mnehinli and fib.Diitni OHrelron ttafliriirdniDtDrMBi.fi anfai. On aff " APRIL PI1IST, " avnrv nlh.f Tlia Xiaaxka.'b KNITTING MACUIIfE. " THB CR0WN1N0 TRIUMPH." TfMTi A STOflKIMO BDB3TANTIALLT 00 xa. rtiBia, antttiog in. b. i, thn toe tt It gc.i .l-.Dg. t.d BBrrowlna-nff .. aaia Bp tut owb woik, certificate of his manhood and patriotism he '"K ' the oommitte until next Thursday, koli. my tlto, from two loops forming a eord, Bp returned to th. oounty, who., quota h. had No action will b. had upon th. cas. during h.',Bon:b.rPor!Sip.:'d.;,d, V.uT.w i"d'., Wft " helped to fill, wilh the expectation of find- the interim. ! ri.t Wab th.Poail. Fl.t Weh, th. Fi.'a Bibboa known to all the readers of this paper that I and towns arc liable to, this gam. merits w. have strenuously ureed the soeedieat possible restoration of insurgent States to their old tlatiu in the Union, and that w. desir. tho return of peao. in all relations civil, sooial, andecolesiastioal. It will surprise some to know that we hav. pursued thi. oourse, while many at th. South nr. writing to us tbat w. ar. going too fast, th. indorsement of tbe best classes of the oommuiflty. The Kev. C. H. Everest, of J Brooklyn, Now York, in a ssrmon on physi cal education, whioh he lately delivered, mail, a special allusion to base bail as a gam. "whose rogulations are oaloulated to prevent tho ill feolings engendered by other games; and one, moreover, which serves to ing a family that belonged to him, and! 11 supposed that no objections of mo- which It would be his privilege to labor for ment will oa made to his confirmation, and educate. ...... dJnoaael lor tbe Trial of JIT. llavla. rftalitZwH? n. h. b.R.PPOin Wl"' Maaara. Evart,Clifford and Rousseau have . I l?,g th;t,whl1' h hiTB"n "glbg been retained by th. Government for th. in. Ditties or nis oountry, Ignatius Kut- tri&i of jtff rj,ia. t war hem vm. lodge bad appropriated hit fire ohildren, sou oiftimea to Jioid tbem during their en tire minority by virtue of indentured sp prenticeship suthorltod by the Orphsn'e uourt oe me oounty. vvun ftrespeot for Flat Web. and tb faoo Bibbad Vial Wah. with Mlndgoa, Ho oihr IWachtn In I be World md do nn tuiieoi ineM iDinn, It knlU Bhawli. Hooda. Hnblu. Jackati. Rr.k flut Uaptw, fiacka. Cklrla, Uodarablr a. Drawara. Boji'i t-olii, Obildrao'a Cloaka, Know Shot, Lg. giof, Qiovaa, Mlttena, and upward of forty dlffarant that th. .Ut. of feeling doe. not justify attract our young men from pl.oe. of bad Uwh cl "L, hta Infinit. orsdit. 11 oa immediate restoraUon. that ao muoh nf ihn ret.t.i. ..,,1 m ...nnlv ih. ri.hi kinrl n ... . w' wnlcu 0. tlm. """lt orsdit, Uioo The AdmlBsloii or Colorado by theBen- MA APO-DUlIlll. immediate restoration, that so much of the war spirit still prevails that the people oan not scud Union men to Congross. But w. har. felt tlist kindness was the most effectual means of conciliation, and that the war had forever settled the question of so-cession and nationality. We have bean willing to trust tha Sonth, and to aid in building up bar wast, places, and Io restore the harmony of th. Hopublio with th. Last poestoi. aciay. repute, and to supply the right kind of ex- eroiao and amusement. Tbia opinion has been practically indorsed by several olergy-mon of Philadelphia, who last year formed themselves into a baeo ball olub for the pur pose of healthful and moral reereation, in imitation of the hundreds of Eoglish persons who tako such delight in playing criog- et on toe commons oi tneir viusgos. But one of tbe strongest inducements to the poplarity of our Amerioan game of ball forbore any irregular assertion of his I t.rrl a V . n.ln- ,1,. .... .1.1. L. . I. . article!. tim. and place of trial hav. not b.e'n defi- KlSKlS'iS 1KJ Wl'tR,.! ia taa mots money maaipg ana Ubor-Mrlfg Invao tlorj or tha an. From lUU to 150 tvar Mint nrnflt on iIiiIa ia xne limes ipeotai autb: xne would be pnwuc. om0arirDiDgiroin eiotopar P - va at. waa. wa Ml 1 a 1 A? ATI. I . 1 IWTK. BUItl US LIUBIBl V ill DLakDia aftlld ta. Vl A AAV rt-al. riahts as a fatbar to hia own ohil.lr.n ht voiorauo were upon tba Boor to0 .,.,. - - - emp'oyed legal oounsel to procure ft writ of 1. 1 S, ,0-a,l' "PI1I,IM of J'mBrhlB.wAaBAv.otoworka.r.pr..nhJ. halitM eorpiu, to test tbe legalily of the in- : . : " . . " , .irm,m.uw. .. .,.. n,K.. i denture. That oounsel, instead of prooood- Ppa no' as gooa ss us inentls would Lj kh.vt.bo m.oii.n. MMiMornmio l)o, m.nation to oppose it; eome for the same reason that Mr. Sumner did, others beceuse it is certain to provoke anothor veto, which will still further alienate the President But w. ar. pained by the neceasily of is, that it is an cut-door sport, and almost saying that the information wa get from the South does not encourage us to labor in thia direction. Particularly ia the int.Ul-genoa unfavorable in regard to the imnutert of lb. South. A pastor in ono of the Southern Statee writes as follows :- "It is ft fnot that tho ministers of th. Qospel In the South who have generally returned to their parishes, nr. almost without exoeption bitterly opposed to the Govern ment, and are exerting ail their influence against loyally and reconstruction. It ia tbo only on. which ladies oan countenance and witness. American ladies have hitherto beeu shut out from all tho pleasures Incident to ouch games as base ball and cricket, and as the gratification of witnessing manly contest for superiority in courage, activity, good temper, and judgment, by tho low oharaoter of tho surroundings ant aesooiations of most of the sports moo indulgo in. In bsse ball, however, we have an exoeption in their favor, which they have not bosn slow to take advantage of, as ing by legal process, communloated with Ratledge, and he, after a full conference with the connsol of Rioe, informed the counsel that ho did not wish tho tronbl. and expense of a suit and directed him to inform Rico that he oould have his children if he would oome and get them. The infor- -ate atiu ..t tuaiii- inainier. n-nnnii.t...... ., motion wa communicated to llio.. no f."""anaut. in.sam.represent.li, want la ih. hnt... nf Bt.H.ti.. t. d..it.i.. "u .... oenaio aa in. great state 01 ISO stated th. purpose r,f his coming, received J,01' ' B11'8,1, unjust an. his ohildren from Rutledge, and look th.m ble on ",y mM .rounds i to his homo. Attorney fivnrral Miteed Oi the opinion of candid loyal men, that Ihey th. pitronage of tho hundred, of tho fair aro .xerting a stronger influence in that box who have for three or four years past dlreotion than any other olass of men in gtuoed baBO ball matchei with their wel-the South. come presence oan testify. If our national "Theeo ministers teaoh their people not to I pastime had uo other recommendation than listen to any propositions for aid in sun- this, this faot would suffice to give it a pov- plying preaching for th. destitute; of I nlarity no other recreation oould compete organising anu iurn.sn.ng ounaay oonoois, I witn m me es.imaiion or Americans. un-Hiii those funds be put into the hands of true southern mon, go tor tbeir support and to advance tneir principles. "A Christian gentleman, who hasreoentlv visited eveiy town in nine oountirs in thia State, on business, and made thia a speoial subjeot of inquiry, saye it wae the testimony of the best men everywhere that no Northern missionary or 8. S. agent would bo safe from personal violence. Th. spirit is bitter, very bitter, and so far as I can s.., grows worse. Of what use is It, then, that w. at th. North advocate the restoration of the South Bas. ball, as now played by the clubs of the National Association, ia a New York institution, and it differs materially from tha game in vogue in Now England, the latter of which within the past five years has almost become obsolete. During the lata war, th. soldiers of both oontesling ariuiea matlo the game a meana of recreation ln their oao.pl and priron grounds, and by this means has it been introduced into the South. Thia year th. organisation of ft baseball olub ftt the University at Virginia will giro the gam. an impelu. in th. South which will soon lead to its being oellent reason that to give Colorado, with ion great Stale of Now and unjustifia- whatever. 'oiullis; Weat. Some months aflorwards Rutledge bcoame Attorney General Speed h: gon. West impressed with the belief that if the writ of 10 ,eoruu benim, which is somewhat habcai nrput had been issuod, and he had impaired by close aud unremitting appli- contested it, he might hav. maintained his 0111011 t0 business. olaiin to tho ohildren. Accordingly he Tho Trial or Jvir. linvla a ot Yet De-sent word to Rioe that if tlrtohildron wer. terminer! On. not returned, he (Rutledge) would send him The detsrmination of Ih. lime and placo (Rico) to tho penilonliary. To this Rios of lha trial of Jeff. Davis will not be made only replied that he had violated no law, until Mr. Speed's return, in all probability, and etood upon legal rights. A few days unless something ocours whioh is not now afiorward his ohildren were seised and ta- anticipated by the administration, ken baok to the house of Rutledge, and niaeontlnnnnee of Temporary Leana. Rioe was seliod, handouffod and lodged in The Seor.tary of the Treasury, believing mLln j . . . that (he time has come when the Ooveru-The Grand Jury heard tha ttatamenta of ment ahould no longer be in the position of Rutledge, and found fiv. different indiot- a borrower of money, to-day ordered the ut.u.n touo .ur .... .ui,., against moe, Assistant U. 8. Treasurers to discontinue for .ntloing apprentices tO run awar. tha pnnanllnn nf .1. nn.ita fnr l.mnnr..r. .nd The Great English Remedv. rr.na.van. rl ..111 nih.w. rVa. .!.. I SIR JAMES CLARK'S CELEBRATED I FEMALE PILLS. eri PROTECTED to her ttatut in th. Uhion, when the olergy on. of the most p ipular recreation, ia whioh still preach hostility to th. Government, the leisure olasscs ot tho "land of chivalry" and tho Mayor of Mobil., with th. appro- are pron. to indulge, .spatially ao as it is When th. oases were oalled for trial at the last term of our Court, the friends of Rice were satisfied that he oould not have a fair and impartial trial here, and by their advice, Rico made that affidavit, and th. oases wer. sent to Baltimore oounty. There the eases came up for trial last week, and all th. foregoing facta were developed Able oennsol were employed to assist tbo State's Attorney, hut lha Court did not hesitate to say that Rica hsd violated no law, and to diraot that ha be discharged. btiion of his fellow oitiiens, pays publio honors to ' President" Davis? To us it seems wonderful that men can eipeot to hava tha oonnaanco, support ana material aid of tha Norib, while they thua continue to nurture ana spread a iceiing of disloy alty and positive hostility to the Government under whioh they live. W. with that w. had mora avideno. of ft better stale of things. If any of our readers in th. Soulh will writ, to ns and give A plan for th. vault at Arlington Cema-t.ry in whioh th. remain, of the Union dead from th. Virginia battle-fields ar. to bi deposited, has bean approved by the Quarlrrmaetcr-Qenernl, and Colonel M. Luddington, Chief Quartermaster-General of the Department of Washington, ha. ad- a eport which tho Southern be'.ies .an pa trooii. as do tbeir oompscra ofth. Eoglish nobility the oricket matobe. of the oollegl-ana of Oxford and Cambridge. In fact, whether base ball be regarded as a desirable means of physical exercise an exoiting game for tbe masses, or ft reoreation whioh ia devoid of every reasonable objection that vertlssd for proposals for ita construction. tha molt fastidious moralists could inter- It will ba made under ground, oiroular in pose, it ia equally to be commended to the ahapa, with an interior diameter of twenty patronage of every American oitiien, north, feet and ooverod with a hemispherical ut facta to ahow that th. ministers are south, east, or west, a. ths most fltiug gam. arch or dome. On th. top of thi. dom. will studying things that make for pcac. and for a national out door sport. be an elliptical opening, oovered with a brotherly lov. between the Nona and th. In this city the National, Potomac, Jeffer- atone tablet, whioh will be above the sur- 8outb; that eueh sentiments aa Mayor aon, and Union aro the leading baaa ball face of th. ground, and on which proper Withers ar. not prevalent: tbat there i. a organisation, of th. District, and besides inscriptions may b. plaoed. Th. vault gradual improvement in th. ton. af feeling these there are s.voral prominent organi- will b. divld.d into fonr compartm.nls toward th. Union and th. Government, satlons among the junior fraternity. On by two oross walls Intcraeotlog at right w. .nan o. more man g.aa to lay tnem do- neanesnay, ine zotn, in. nationals play a angiva, lore ma ptmno. ivory interesting game together on me If our ahurohee are to b. reunited, and I President's grounds, and on Friday a grand the Southern State, represented in Con-' orloket mttch takes plan. attbe same local- loans. District BnlTrnge Bill. The Senate will take up the Universal Suffrage bill for the District of Columbia next week, so say several Republicans. PrenlilcntlBl jromlnntlon. Among the nominations Bont to the Sen ate thi. morning by th. President, were the following : uol. II. H. ltrewster, to be United Stales Dial riot Attorney for Kentucky; C'has. W. Webster. Deputy Postmaster, Fort Plain, New Yoik;' D.Gregg, Receiver of Publio Money, Carson Cily, Nevada; John A. Clark, Surveyor General, Territory of New Mexico; and the following Reoeivcrs of Land Ofnoei, vu : Knyal Ituok, Nebraska Ciiy; Clim. R. Dorsey, Brownsville, Nebraska. and Wm. F. Sweessy, Omaha, Nebraska. Uen. Uraut'a vlslt Ie Mlebmond. Th. Herald's speoial says : Gen. Grant'a visit to Richmond was marked with many pleasing incident, and gratifying results. People flcocked to see him in large numbers from ourioiily, no doubt, but during nis stay ne waa ouueu. upun respeouully by such persons ss Robert Ould, ex-robel Com. ""J' ',? w1"!" mi..ioPn.r for exoh.ng, of prisoner; G... 51 surest during tb. present gensratio of lir- it. Wath. Chronica. W. sometimes oongratulat. ourselves at Ut. moment of waking fromfttraubl.il ed becoming feellnge and asntimcnts. dream; i( may be so th. moment after death, railroad company pluced oar at hit dispo- Joseph Anderson, ot the Tredegar Iron Workr, Alayor niayo, ucne. nickham and Henningsen; Judges Lyon, and Meredith, Hill. Carter, Waller, Harri.on, and manv other influential oillieno. Tha ladies also oalled upon Mrs. Grant fre ly, and every one who called manifest ing LET 01 "",AU&cJ3XJr&A PATENT. FftgPABgn mon a rngscniprioii or " '' SIB JAMES CLARK, M. D., Physician extraordinary to tha Queen. rpBIS IMVALDABLB MEDIOINI IB UKFATL. X INUIn th. cunt of all thot. painful and d.a-gnrnna dlaeaaM t. wnloh tha famale (onitltutton It nbjeot. It roodaratot all .xopaa .nd removal all ob- rno .loo., bbb a .peony onre mj bt rolled on. To Married Ltulleu It It pecnli.rlj eoltnd. It will, In Mm i bring ob the monthly period with regularity. Bach bottle, prloa On. Dollar, boar a th. Oovern-men8tamp of Greet Riilalu, to preront counter, teltl OATJTIOW. !TV Hid thould nt.t 6a lui,, by rrmal dtrinf Oa FIH.1T THHKS MONTHS ot iVflntnacp. a. ,ar, r u brie oa Bfucarrloff, oal al any otto lira, Uu, era mtft. Io all obh. ol N.rvont and Hplaal Affection, Palfla IB the Ba k and Llmba. y.tlgu on alight i-orllon, P.I.ll.tloa of tha Heart, IlT.teilca, aid Whites, thaao Filla will afoot a car. wb.n all oluer meant hava fallal; and.ltnoaaSBanw.rnil remedy, do notooolata irjB,oalomel,antiBionj, or aai thing bartml to tb. oouatttotloii. lull dilution. In th. pamphlet .ronnd eaoh pack age, whhh .hoold be oanfolly pnearvod. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. Bole agent for the Catted Blatn and Canada, , JOH MllttUI. IT Conrtl.nd ttrett, Mow York, H. B. 11 and t poet.ua tami enolottd to aay anthorlted Agent, will Inenro a botti.. oonUluina 60 rtlli, by retoro mall. aoglT aom eod.w ly EYE AND EAR. !L rrlT'rmwlir J.' M' Y'i cllT1y traata VW Vy"ia.Dc.i. Dlir-iiN oi th ICtaa, and lo- aatala Aa-tlMnlail Kmmm a.. ' . . . n iT et vvtimuYT rA IB, TBAT treat, (oppoalU tha hlo. AlaufivBUhM end Ear, for 40 oat. laoftdly IS6S. A Boat will I naned doIo'. Freigh r lFd at our Wanhoui" at Faat aad Weat ard of National Brldg. Offlot 87 Watt Broad atratvl. . , U. JITOH ft tOJi. mrao t( Oolumbua, ChlUUothe &. Pottsmoutb And Fast Freight' JLIne. . ' J "".'Tit ' n uj ! - mi PABtHENGlB PACKKTfl LKAVK TBOf FOOT of Broad itrcct on Mnndaja, Wtidoradayi aod frldaji 'ortlrcl'Talle.Ohilllootbft.JMper, KaTarly ShtrooTilU and Porta mouth, ooonactlng at Porth month with SttatDttia ur Pomeroj. Oliljollf( Irooton and all Laadinga on tha Polo Blvar. Tha nuala aro provided with lion Hatai for tho t'anamtiikn of Taloablo Packc, PaaMt-sata wltl Aad tt.t h moit cnpifnrlabla aad pleaDt , mods o( trat 11 pg ijowia Scioto Trolgb rpoalvod at onr Wrchonit t Ktit n4 Wet vA of National Brlde. ' ffl a-f7 WMt Broad ttraat. H.VIIOfleOM. rSOif - ,f .... . .. v. Corsot and MtirtJfmporium, " ' " 1VO M K4ST ToWlf BT. WB WOUI-D IMVITB TBB LADIBB OT CO-LUMBUti to oall and x -mlnaonr new at I Amrlean ori(, wartantcd whaieboaa, arid made from tna boat mrttfrtal. 8tanT'lia,s'Iondon Royal Cord" aod 'A lilbit, both .plain and liolilj avbroldnrad. i - , 1 Al'O, Mndrttu oym Cor act BkJri Hnp-ftOrtrt whico It an axceUvnt (lorret for InTalida. nni la BuvrAl f liked. Wt kcrp on hand balk rreDchandUaraanOvraatii alaoi tba tofeaat atvlo ' o o p B It i r1 t 'm m hVLtidlM In attrndanoa. '" '' ' 1 AUEaTS WANTHD-100 L6m. (M aall Madam Voj'a Ouxaat Skirt bupportnr. I. II. nAUHUIKB UU. laprfl 1m Ho. 84 Batt Town at.. Off - iOTICK TO CONXl(i(OJK8. SKA LCD PBOrOBAtS WTLt Bl RVBIVBD I J tba nndanlcned at tba offloa of too Board of Publio Worm, In lb city of Ouluabua, on At OH- ' , iuj ovtu ui nyt', ioiih. uoiwirii i.uty tiimra ui 9 and 4 o'clock P. M. of aatd Amf, tbr the dollwtDf and treaklu lime atone oa tha National Ko"d ba- iwetn ina iihir ana jasta miiei. aa nnntnoraa weat. from Who) I dc. The amonnt to be eUred on tho different milaa ! aa followa: On mi lea Ui VZl, Ui and 123. W rod ech: on mlloa 1 and li 80 rod ach; nn mlla UQ, 131 ard, IS'i, M rodaWh; on miMi lt, 13ft, 1J, 187 and 1:18, 8& rod naoh. Bidder mtut atate the prloe per rod o(.)100 oablo fat. Ths atone to be del We ted at lutili place on the d ft rant ml It a. aa tha Realdtnt Bt.ir Inner mv di a If net, and to be brtken to a aiae not exceeding Iwor ooaofa in weight. Blda for ill breaklbi aad del Iter Id mnit ba aeparata. , . i ne right to nj ot mat ia rean' Ted. H'JIN a; Oclm BLAIR. BeaJiltflt Bifffre-r. ibaa, March 80, 1800 . AeiHi td Sttfman oopjr.1 Ladies desiring a OJear and fc1 . "B 111 V I k tfL. ir , lnlnTITlA.TTl VVi 1 1 free of poetagslo any aaJra FttHRlB A ROnilUSON-a i Wonitrrfnl Fxtfrmlnatorf D'ath Io At i a, Mie, Koacbes, Ante, ttdbnv And all klnda ot iaot. WbolMala Doaol, e)and 61 Fnlt-in rr-t. Brook ljn, N. T. HABH1S A 81QLKB, WhnlsssAiila Ati'ra fin n n Bold at Retail by 0. Bo nan Co. aud J, B. uooa, Tfali dellt-htfnl Toilet artlo' I aa oo equal lor Pre. erring aad Baaatliylng tb Oomp'exlon nhd Hkts, Bold bj Brttfgleti every where. .M , Mt, 74 FirLTOM STBKETfl IV. Y. lbudemjoootny WALMT STREET HOUSE, CINCINNATI, OBIO: THIS HoUBB BAS BBOBNTLT BRtN BB rURNIBIIED and thorongbly ranavward Tha patronagaof lha IraTellug pobllo la reipeot fatly ao uaiiva. . m. uaiiiaaiikn uu., Proprletora. TAKaL'tt OHAMPIOM BUOAB IVA FOB ATO XJ will make IRO gal loot Byrop p day o twrstrcbonraltHeord of wood, and a better arttola wlb lea lbrr than ny now In oat. . Will fornlih tb Avaporatora. or eell ilng'a righta Io ui, for 110. Bend for ao tl lot rate clronlar, giving partlenlara. - - M DIAL, - lWblWaodMWSSm ' Baoyrai, Ohio.
Object Description
Title | Columbus morning journal. (Columbus, Ohio), 1866-04-28 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Date of Original | 1866-04-28 |
Searchable Date | 1866-04-28 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Rights | Online access is provided for research purposes only. For rights and reproduction requests or more information, go to http://www.ohiohistory.org/images/information |
Type | Text |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn84028628 |
Reel Number | 10000000028 |
Description
Title | Columbus morning journal. (Columbus, Ohio), 1866-04-28 page 1 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Searchable Date | 1866-04-28 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Type | Text |
File Size | 3871.01KB |
Full Text | TERMS OF ADVEUTlflllf CL Daily Om fqaere, each lDMrttoBw.H....mM 0 lb " iHdtl HvtioM r aar. mob iMM' Uobwhh tl : u , hoel nd BatiiMM Notice. Mr line. eaoh lDMrtloa.H.H....H..Mmww.M. 0 10 VwtiLT 0q Square, fclnrtioB. ...M1A0 LOCAl BDdBUflDVtl MouocMr lu. ;T :i , each utUob.. , 0 10 WDil Bqnare eoren tbree-qaarten of M tBOB i apeoe ia toe ooiamu oi in j oubh.au , Marrtag) HotlOM AOota., when noder fWe lloei. v Book and Job Prist!! neatly Bad promptly e an tea. Business Directory. DBAKRG, noKTIIH K A.torooe .(-Lew, XI amlto.' gn-ldtn.-, 07 Ho. Mishltt. j.Bir am flOX.C (1., plr Ib Fin. 7obaceo aa O'gars, V no. 77 Bonth liigh it. J.B1B sm nOWmi. K. H . rhiilcUl aad BoriroB, Mo. I V Op.ro H u.e Block. J.B1T If FOI'lHrAIH, W. W., Pbj.lcl.BBod SargMa. OtBo. to N.iixhton Bulldln;. JbbIiIv G ABUHRR, A., Jr.. Hotarj. Public, Johasoa Blork, 117 Bomb High it Jbb17 1 HUH H , VASJICIUrF titthbh, Manafectnrer. of TrBBBB end Valt..., Not. IM nil 1! 1 .'oath High HM JaalS Im TTBYL, Wl. Ij , Notary Pablle and JnetlMof AA TTII D. Hlgli.L.np. l.tK.ilonJb'k. Janl7 ly GOtlH JOURNAL. TERMS OP SUBSCBIPTIOI tWU or TAB B4ILT MVWA&. 9.Bli SabaorflMn. 1 - 8.01 ItaUatlBM LU. -J" tMogle Sabeertbe-, a Bioth, " " a Siucle f abMFibarA. l .. n """""" 2 Slug 1 fubseribtrak 1 B.h.' elTM-rT' NDIWDOOHriDMl, PW W It. Mllttmd ,,.,. 03 IO CNU pr JVR ch ONT, MSJM W BUB TBI-WBBELI MBMUL VOLUME ; XXVIII. Ji. c COLUMBUS,' OHIO, SASURDAY MORNING, APRIL 28, 1866. NUMBER 245. 1ZZ 1 Id 1 1 auatkJIZ: un or ran weaaxr ,ioo-.nAn. I oinle SobeOTtbert, per rv..... l r'r 1 1 BoaaBs..... lb. Pi.c, 7 "o-iib Hitn ilrnl, JnlT tm VTV II IHHO IK, I. A., Ol.lm Agenl, 117 Sonlb ' INUKMANN ., OoolMlToutt.nl l Uurl.anr Ainbu.1 BuiMiox, J..U If TJOLLAKDA BOWKM. arion. OItII Id X (Ineon no Bol Bl AooU, Mo. IS Wl 6iiY. & ttt wr Ttviic ,.r.Bd M B.ll Blt.lGIIDgt g I dbiiiidk. i.aif kj OHKM.F.JVriARUKK. H. '., Cl.lr. Aft'l, OfllTH, . n Pbfi'oBdl!arm Olot 9 ou Mt.te, E.itof Ftnrth. airgfllyr TAM.a A IIUK,T. W., Nol.rf Poblio "lalai A'l, Amboi' Bullillpfc lit B High it. )nl7 lf WARItKN A HIIJIOIV, Altointf auiaw, i.im is a m.rM. Forty years ago, Bt. Malo ponimed an alley known ny th nam or tba "Huelle Uoutanohei." Thu alley no Ion iter eziitf. ' haring been rtmoied for lha ImprovemenU oi nt town. It waa a iloubla row of housrt, leaDing ono lowara toe oioer, aua leaving bslween ' ' ' them juat room enough for a narrow ritu-let, which ill oslleii tbe alreet. By stretch ing tae legs It was possible to walk on both idea of the little stream, touohing with head or elbowB, as you went, the houses either on I lie right or left. Theee old relios of medfoTal Normandy have almoat ft ho- man interest. Tumble-down houses and soroerers alwavs iro toflreiher. Their l.an. Ing stories, their orer-hanging walls, their Doweu pont-nousea, and tbeir old thiok-set irons, seem like lips, clilos, noses and eyebrows. Tbo garret window is the blind ye. The wall is the wrinkled md blotohy oheek. The opposite houses lay their foreheads tegelber as if they were plotting some malicious deed. All those words of ancient Tillainy like out-tbroal,slit-woai-and, and the like - are closely connected With architecture of this kind. One of those houses in tbe alley the largest and tbe most famous or notorious was kuottn by the name of the Jjtores-- de. The Jacresssde was ft lodging-house for people who do not lodge. In all towns, and particularly in sea -ports, mere is always found beneath the lowest stratum of eociety ft sort of residuum: rttgubonils who are more than a match for juitioo; rovers after adventures; abemislsof the swindling order, ' who are alwnj'S dropping their Hvoa' fain into the melting pot; people in rags of every BBpe, ma every aiyie or wearing mem withered fruits of roguery; bankrunt axis tences; ooueoienoes Ihnt have filled their eobedule, gentlemen who have failed In the house-breaking business (for the, great masters oi Durgiury move in a nigber sphere;) workmen and workwomen in the trade of wiokedness; oddities, male and female; men (in coals out at the elbow; sooundrels reduoed to indigenae; rogues who have missed the wages of roguery; men who nave ootn nit in we social duel; harpies wno nave no longor any prey; petty laroen ere; giuiu in the double and unhappy mean' ing of that word. Snob, are the constitu ents of tbat living mass. Human intelli gence is here reduoed to something bestial. It is the refuse of the social state, heaped up in an obscure oorner, where from time to time, dusoendsthatdrcavled broom whioh Is known by tbe name of pollue. In St, Malo, Jaoressado was the name of that oorner. It is not in dens of this sort that wo find - the high-olass orimiuals the robbers, for gers, and olhor great produots of ignorance and poverty, if murder is represented here, it is generally in the person of some coarse drnnkaru: in tbe matter of robberv, the company rarely rise higher than the mere sharper. The vagrant is there, but not ine nignwayman. it would not, kow i' aver, he safe to trst this distinction. This . last stage of vagabonds may have its ex. " trainee or sooundrousm. it was on an occasion, when casting Ihsir nets into the Epi-scie which was in Paris what the Jaoressade was in St Malo that the police oapiureu tne notorious baoenaire These lurking places refuse nobody. To fall in the sooial scale has ft tendency to onog men io one level, sometimes honesty in tatters found itself there. Virtu ftnd probity have been known before now to be brought to strange passes. We must not judge always by appiaranoes, even in the palaee or at tbe galleys. Publio re- apeoi, as well as universal reprobation, require testing. Surprising results some times prooecd from this principle. An an. gel may be disoovcrrd in the stews a pearl in ine oung nui. ttuoo sad and danling aisooverita are not attogetner unknown. The Jaoretaide was rather court-yard than a house; and mote of a well than ft 1 eourt-yard. It had no stories looking on the street. Its facade was simply a high wall, Willi a low gateway. You raised the - - la'cb, pushed the gate, and were at onoe in - ine court-yard. : In the midst of Ibis yard might be per - oeived a round bole, enoiroled with ft mar-i gin of stones, and even with the ground Tiie yard was small, the well large. A broken pftvement eurrounded it. The court-yard was rqusre, and built round on three sides only. On the side of tbe street was only tbo wall; facing you as you entered the gateway stood the home the two wings of which formed tbe sides to rigbt and tort. Any one entering there after nightfall, at his own risk and peril, would have heard ft confused murmur of voices; and, if there had been moonlight or starlight enough to give shape to the obscure forms before his eyes, this is what he would have seen. The ocurt-yard the well. Around the oourt yard, in front of the gale, a lean-to, or shed, in ft sort of horse-shoe form, but with square corners; a rotten gallery, with ft roof of joists supported by stone pillars t unequal distances. In the center, the well; around the well, upon ft litter of straw, ft kind of oiroular ohaplet, formed of the Bolee of bools and shoos; eome trodden down at heel, some showing the toes of the wearers, some tba naked heels. The feet of men, women and ohildrcn, all asleep. Beyond theeo feet, the eyo might have distinguished, in the sbudow of the shed, bodies, dropping heads, forms strotohed out lazily, bundles of rags of both eexes, ft promiscuous assemblage, a strange and revolting mass of life. The aooommodation of this sleeping ohamber was open to all, at the ra'a of two sous per week. On a stormy night the rain fell upon the feet, the whirling snow settled on the bodies of those wretched sleepers, Who were these people ? The unknown. They oame there at night, and departed In the morning. Creatures of this kind form part of the social fabric Some stole in during the darkness, and paid nothing. The greator part had scarcely eaten during the day. All kinds of vioe and baseness, very sort of moral infection, every epeoies of distress were there. The same sleep settled down upon all in this bed of filih. Tho dreams of all these companions in misery went on side by side. A dismal meeting-place, where misery ftnd weakness, balf-sobered dehauohery, wearinesa from long walking to and fro, with evil thougbtr, in quest of bread, pallor with oloaed eyelids, remorse, envy, lay mingled and festering in the same miasma, with fooea that had the look of death, nod dishevelled hair mixed with the filth and sweepinga of th treets ness of th placa. They snatobi what Utile of themselves they could from the jaw of death. They closed their eyes in that oonfusion of horror wbiob every day renewed. They wen th embodiment of misery, oast up from society, ft th sount is rrom in sea. - It was not every one who aould even gel a ibare of th straw. More than on figure wa strttohed out naked upon th flag. rhev lay down worn out wit weariness and awoke paralysed. ' ine wen, witnont lid or parapet, and tntrty real in deptn, ranru open night and day. Rain fell around it: filth accumulated about, and th gutters or th yard ran dowa ana nitarea tnrouga its sides. The pail for drawing th water stood by tbe erne, .xnoa wao war tnirsty drank there: son, dugustM wl:h life, drowned themselves in it slipped from their clumber in th filthy shed in to this pro-founder sleep. la th year 1819, ih body of a boy, fourteen yean aid, was taken np out or tne well. . .nri. .1 1 To be safe in this home, it wa nossary to be or th "right sort, tn uninitiated were ngarded With soiplc'oi. 1 . Did thes miserable wretobes, men, know each other? No. Yet they .aoented out th genuine habitue of the Jaoressade. Th mistress or us ncuso waa ft young and rather pretty woman, wearing a aap trimmed with ribbons. She washed herself now and then with water from the wall. ouB Bin a wuvuon irg. f j At th break of day, th court yard os- oama empty. It inmates dispersed. An old oock and some other fowls wr kept in the Court-yard, where they raked among th filth or one pitoe an (ley long. A lone horizontal beam, supported by posts. traversed tbo yard a giooet-snaped erec lion, not altogether out of keeping with the associations of th place. Sometimes, on tbe morrow of ft rainy day, ft Silk dress, mudded and wet, would be seen hanging out to dry upon this beam, it belonged to me woman witn in woousn leg. 1 Over the abed, and like it, aurrcnnJicg th yard, wa ft story, and above this story, a lofi. A rotten wooden ladder, passing through t hole m tne roor or tn abed, con ducted to this story; and up this ladder the woman would olimb, sometimes ataggering wbile its crsiy rounds oreaked oentfttb her. ine occasional lodgers, wnetner by the week or the nighl, slept in thai oourt-i yard; the regular inmates lived in the bouse, 1 . Windows without a pane of glass, door- irame wnn no door, nic-niacos without stoves suoh wsre th chief features of th interior. You might pass from ono room to the other indifferently, by a long ' snuare aperture whioh had been the door, or by a triangular hole between the Joists of the partition. The fallen plaster of the ceiling lay aoout tne noor. 11 was dimcuit to say now. tne old nous sun stood eraot. The high winds indeed shook it. The lodgers asoenaed ss iney eouia by tbe worn and slippery aleps of the ladder. Everything was open 10 me air. ine wintry atmos phere was absorbed into the house, like water into a sponge. The multitude of spiders seemed to guarantee the plaoe against fall ing to pieoea immediately. Thero was no sign of furniture. Two or Ihrea pailasses were in me oorner, tneir ticking torn in parts, and showing more duet than straw within. Here and there were a water-pot and an aaruen pipkin. A olose, disagree able odor haunted the rooms. - - Tbo windows looked out upon the square yard. The scene was like the interior of a scavenger's cart. Tha things, not to apeak of th human beings, which lay meting, moidering, ana pntrnying mere, war indescribable. The fragments seemed to fraternise together. Some fell from lha walls. others from the living tenant of th place. The debris was sown with their tatiers. Beside, tha floating population which bi vouacked nightly in the square yard, the Jaoressade had three permanent lodgers a obarooal man, a rag pioker, and a "gold maker." Tha oharsoal man and tha rag picker oooupied two of the pailassea of the first story; the "gold maker," ohemiat, lodged in the loft, which was called, no one knew why, tha garret. Nobody knew where the woman alept. The "gold maker" wae a poet in small way. lie inhabited ft room in the roof, under th.tilu aoham-bor with ft narrow window, and a large stone fire place forming a gulf in Which the wind howled at will. The garret win dow having no frame, ho had nailed; aorose it a pieoa of iron sheathing, part of the wreck or a abip. this sueatbing left aula room for the entrance of light, and much tor tha entrnnoe .of oold, Tha obarooal man paid rent from time io time ia the shape of s saok of obarooal; the rag-picker paid with ft bowl of grain for th fowls very week; th "gold maker" did not pay tll. Meanwhile, the latter consumed the very house itself for fuel. H had palled own th little wood-work whioh remained: and every now and then he took from the wall or the roof a lain or soma sosntling, to heat his orucible. Upon tha partition, above the tbe rag nioker'a mattress, might have been seen two oolumns of figures, marked in chalk by the rag-picker himself from week to week a column or threes, ana a column or fives aooording as the bowl of grain had cost im throe iiards or nvo oentimes. xne gold- pit of tha "chemist" was an old fragment of a bomb-shell, promoted by him to the igniiy of a orucible, tn whioh he mixed ingredients. The transmutation bf met als absorbed all his thought. He wa de termined not to die nntil he hsd revenged himself by breaking the windows of ortho ox soienca witn ma real punouonner s one. His furntco consumed ft good deal of wood. The hand-rails of th stair had disappeared. The house was slowlyi burn ing away. The landlady eaid te hint, "iou will leave nothing but the shell." , lie mollified her by addressing her in verses. Such was the Jaoressade. I . ; , A boy of twelve, or, perhaps, sixteen for ha was like dwarf, with a large wen upon is neck, and always carrying a Broom ib is hand was tbe domesuo or tbe plane. The habitues entered by the gateway the court-yard; the publio entered by the P. What was this shop 7 In th high wall, facing the street, and to the right of the entranoe to the court yard. was a square opening, serving at ono as a oor and a window. It bad a abutter and a ma the only shutter in all tha bousa hich had hinges and bolts. Behind this uare aperture, wbion was open u the street, was ft Utile room, ft oompartniontob-tained by curtailing tha sleeping shed in the court yard. Over tha door, passers by read the inscription in charcoal, "Curiosities sold here." On three boards, forming tha shop front, were several pots without ears, a Chinese paraaoi made of gold-beater's and ornamented wiib ngurea, torn heto and thera, and impossible to open or u'; rragment or iroo, and ahapeless ieoes of old pottery, and dilapidated hats d bonnets; inreeorroorstieiis, soma pack ets of old bona and metal buttons, a lobao- 00 box with ft portrait of Marlc-Antolnetle, a dog'a-eared volume of Boisbvrtrand! Al gibri. Suoh waa the atock of the shop; this assortment oompleted tbe "curiosities." lha ahop commanioated by a baokdoor with the yard in whioh waa the well. It waa furnished wiih a table andsiool. Tha woman with a wooden leg presided at the counter. , Sunday Heading.- THBEK WtlBDS OF IB,KGTU.. - There ar. IhrMl'Mons I woald write ' Thrt. words, as With a baraiog pen, la traclog of .Ureal llg'Jl, . 4 DpoBtB.hrtsofai.n. ' f . i OavsBoptl Though olends environ ronnd, A ad gladaew hides atr the. Io to jra, ' ' Pat thoa the shadow from tby brow Ho night bat hath Its mora, i', 1 - , Bav. frith I Wk.ra'.r thy betk It drlmi laeeilm's disport, tht.aipMt's m:rta . Know thil, Ood rnlts tb. host ol btavaa, TbeiohabllsBts ofearth. VavoLovsl Hotlov. a loot tor 001 i : Bat n.B, at man, thy brother oall, Aod tuttir, Ilk. tha slrclliigraa, ' Thf chanties 01 til. . . .TbM gran tbtt. !mobi oa tby toul- Bop, ralth aid Lova-andUioaiball Had Bt.e ogth wbaallfa't surges indstl roll, ,'t I'ght wht.ihja.lt.w.rlb iadi .1. SoHillbb. There were in China, last year. 187 mis sionaries, inobiding women. Of these nlaely-two are Amerloans, seventy-seven are English, and eighteen are German. A lingular ineident has taken nlaaa at Neuohatal in Swilierland. . At the death of merchant in that oilv. on tba credit aid. 01 lis doom tn name of "Ood" waa found to be insoribed for ft considerable sum. No one knew of such a oreditor, and on investigation evidence was obtained that deceased, who wa a man of great piety, had opened an aocount to the Father of All, and entered to it each year a share of his profit. The olergy have olaimed the sum on tha ground that they represent Ood uoon earth. while their demand ia onnnsed bv tha authorities of tha oanton. log man, wo must have no such representative toasts as Mayor Wither', and ft better exhibition from the Southern pulpit. - On of th f outhern religion- paper apeak of A. il. Stephana' views, ftnd the faot of his alcotion to th United State I Senate, as evidence of tha improved ton of publio sentiment. Wa hail auoh sentiment (a his with- intense satisfaction. But is has bean alwaya regarded aa ft Union man I at heart, believing in th abstract right of Secession, but denying it expediency un der any (listing oiroumslanots. mere ar obvious reason why suoh ft man, with hi vast polit'cal influence, should hie selected by th Legislature of Georgia to rep resent tha State in tha United Slataa Sen- I ato. It ia ftlso a good sign. And because wa have honestly undertaken to advocat th right of loyal Union man ! iota in I Congress, and th duty of Contrail to ox- Iolud all others, w shall be glad to have testimony to th existence and growth of a sentiment of earnest devotion to that Government whioh ia to ba tha only power I said nobleman to ft talkative person who w ruio till, wiia wbiiv mv biuvi lit v.. I w . .;i,jn.n.. 1, ; .,jH i.i.j.j . But we know that tba present generation I , .., 1 will nss. .... and a Tew n.ratin will 'J. ffhti the gabbler, "wa are ao orowd- lake their placet, before tha South will ba ad at tha tabl that I da not Personal and Miscellaneous. TELEG ft A PHI ft tiBBAT THOUGHT). Who ou Black, gnat thoughts I Tbsy stls. apoath.Mlad 1 amst and search, Aad shah It 1 bow Ih. toll Mlad aa by wiad j Both onr It like rlv.rt ovw nads. . Whlea gnaw la th. oarnat 1 tars at told, Aad pel., aad volMlavt ; Ivevtog in th. brain A rocking aad a rlagtog glorloat, But momentary, stadaois Might It last. 1 '.. Fasni. A counlry editor describe th eollpie of I th moon 11 beautiful and total." REPORTED FOR THE JOURNAL. Afternoon Dispatches. FROM PORTLAND, HE. Tha Fanlnmsllefiirnlnt Bailor en ske Teaael. PoiTLixn, April 27. si. Th Spottswood Hons signed him ft I iitrg. .uus 01 rooms, tno naiiara lloua offered to do the earn., and every op vied ti coniritut labia aemfort and pltasura. us umu ubov witn uen. 7 urnar, tempera rily commanding. He visited Ft. Harrison and other point of interest and return wen pieaaea witn m visit. FROM SAN FRAJKOI9CO. Telr;rpb4aarrl-Mlnlagr Block. 8m FaAHCttco, April 26. Tha California Stat Telegraph Company BOOKS. asooim tatloiieir'sH H. BIIBT ' WhoUaal aad Bttafi ' BOOKSELLERS & STATIONERS Xo. 199 South Hikh Street, VKIOH BLOSf, ' Oolumbua, Ohio. Oonitantly on hand all th. loading Tbe steamboat New Brunswick arrived 'o-day served an Injunction on th United I L&W, M fdic&l AOd Schwvl BMfJ frnm RhIh-wI tki. mamIii. will. 9HH P- I Slat P.flifirt T.I.P&nh fn-r. n m tn n I f A man oomplalned of hi daughter's ex-1 sns on board. On leaving for Boston, ssv- nt th latter from doing business between U-vaganoe, because she persisted in buying . "- K" b " ! behind. "ain pomuj in California. a waUrfall f k.r b.arl wb.n .h. . "" ur.) -.. ibuibub, --- , . "r- . ... . . wno W(r6 ,poiliDt for , ggkt, drew u,, ,mi, io; imperial, 140; .Empire Mill, 185; v. ..v. wu.u. urova . piatoia on tno omcers and obliged tna boat rmu, nuu; uavage, iwoo; (jbollar that. - " toputbaok. Soma of tba ringleaders war oioai, 01 1, ana renow Jaoket, ?86, rut asnore and sent on by rail, and th boat "Your hand ...oy. m. .xca.di.gly," J JXd .t 9 ." c.c'.k" 1 not know where Io represented in Congress, if in public meet-1 ings Jeff. Davis continues to be toasted aa I patriot, and th minister of th Uospel fos- tr unfriendliness to the Government of the I Union. It is in the power of the Christian people and the ministers of tha Gospel to make I FROM JKKW YORK. Tlio Mew Tork Cwn.rrwilonal Daleara-lion en Recontliactlsa. Niw Yobk, April 27. Tbe Times' special say th. meeting and I action of the New York Congressional dele, gallon, last evening, with refereno to th put my hand.' "Put it ia your mouth" said th nobltman. Th lata Judge P , of Connecticut, was not remarkable for quickness of apprahen- au,itlon 0f reconstruction, has . been the lion. At ft ocrtain time, Hoi. H. W. Shar-1 eubieet of mnch comment to-dav. and ha .0 1 -. , .... . ohanga in this publio sentiment. Not BB w" r'n sa before him, and, In oreaua oonstueraoie surprise among the merely by aooepting tbe issue of war. not th eonrs of his argument. Mr. S. mad a ...... """ " -"Bjoruy by submission to lha inevitable oulv. bulbv noint -M.fc .1,. i..j a:a ' . 01 ln" 'eg"on u .'o 'avor forced rallying around tbo flsg of our common Z" i . ... . negro sutfrage in any event. country, sustaining, heart ftnd hand, the "'. wouia tnank you to state Union of tha States as tba greatest oivil Pint 80 tBat 1 n understand you." bteesing, and ainving to perpetuate this I Bowing politely, Mr. S. replied in his bland- FROM DETROIT. I Railroad Depot aad Teaael Destroy! Ditxoit, April 27. Th passenger ftnd freicht denot of tha Detroit & Milwaukie ftnd Miohigan Southern railroads, and the ferrv steamer Wind sor wer destroyed by fin itat night. A fall and eompUt. assortment of Blank Books and Stationery, rrr, n A IV U IAMB. ' " ovn r, nn, - - W1MIOW All A DM. ' PAIMTIiSM, 1-' rUrfVHtm aad " PICTUKIirilAHeS, wbolaaala aae) KaUiU. LITHOtlRAPHI-O, JOB rAUNTl-e aab Bismna. ,r OOBBtvOfflML n.llrnarf. lUnh. .-J nM. ..ul-. ...viiir-i, BiBra-aM LEAD WORK8. COOKING STOVES. OHIO Pure White Lead I P-EZCEIBirZ .11-: . its coming will be the morning of the a .I..,... I ut'KUwpb ji sunt until uahrruvui uu ion ibuu wuvr iMiB in naoti or asking bar ,ia0 the lath of April, 18B1. JVw York Tba following is th substanco of th. proposition, which wae recsived with tha greateat favor by the meeting: bu... . . 1 1 11 O.t ....... .IV. I. . 1.... . U....UH.H..Ul.UltUl.lOBBing thi spirit yei;butwa watoh for it mora ..... r .i. . T V represenUllon upon population, and pro- than thay who watoh for th morning. For ta"k lm "poting upon viding that whenever any Slate denies suf- . . . . . I mb f I fra xa (a anw ala tit iiii.ana t TTaa XtmA "ft v w vaoars vi viiiaiua vi vua uuiwn Small boy, on lip-to., Io his companions h. the rebellion, auoh disfranohiaed class. ohildren before they retired at night, what Obttrvtr ' , "80 slop your noise, all of you." Compan- or portion, shall bo deduoted from the basis lhay had dona to make others happy, found , ',. . ions "Hellol Tommy! what is th matter?" of representation. her two twin daughters eilenl. The ques- 1 - Sm.ll hn u.i . . . .., Beoond A constitutional amendment pro- tion was repeated. "I oan remember loth- ho Nalloaal Onuw of Ball. , boy- W.vgol n.w baby-it s hibiting th. pay ment of the R.bol debt, and ing good all this Hay, dear mother: onlv The tihvslaua of Americana ha. Inn. ! wy wk ftnd tired -walked all tha way providing that there shall naver be 00m- ooe of my sohool-mates was hannv henaiii.. I a vnlnarahl. mini fnr ih. ii.ir. nf rn. I from heaven last night musn't ba kicking- nensation for emancipated slaves. she had gained the head of the olass, and I aign.rs on the weaknesses of our oountry- up ft row round hero now." Third As part of the plan of reslora- smiled on her and ran Io kiss her; so she men, and hitherto wo have too well deserved n lIc" " ia proposed that whenever these said I was good. That is all, dear mother."- thes. palpable hits from our healthy cut- At Durham Assises a deaf old lady, who amendments be ratified by a sufficient num- The other spoka still more timidly: "A lit- rfoor-sport-lovina- oousins of England. Of had brought an notion for dama.oa ao-aln.t har of States to make them a part of the tie girl, who sat with ma on the bench at lata vin. hnwavar. an linnrnv.m.nt I,.. l. i-i.i.-- i. . . Constitution, then each of tha rebellion. . ...... 1 ' 1 - , - a udi uoimuur. uu Dflint .nninnn. ...ni. . ..... i eonooi, nas lest a little brother. I saw that been manifested in this oountry in this I ,l , , . . , ' " Stales shall be entitled to ths admission of while -she studied her lesson aba hid ho. r.nni n,l m. r.r.m.iin h.. h... i-i. I juig suggested a compromise, ftnd In-1 it Representatives, on their takinv tha ... face in her book and wept. I felt sorry, duoed whioh bids fair to be of great kens fit ,ltl th. oounsel to ask what she would quired oath of office. and Uidmyfaoeonlhesam.bookandw.pt in permanently removing this just oause of I lak. to settle th. matter. "Hii lordship I Fourth The following class of persons with her. Then she looked uo and waa ceuaura. and in lirimnna-iminin th. nh.ai. I , ... . ... . . I to be forever debarred from holdinn- office comforted, aod put her arms around my oal standard of our forefathers, whoseTwell- ". , T wnaiyou will nr ftskcu und.r (h, United BM. Th, f,,,!,,, neck: but I do not know whr she aaid I bad aiarniaail mn.nl-. an.hi.ri ih.n. in 1.. ,h. 'be learned couusol, bawling a. loud ft! he and Vic. President, heads of danarlmanta. done her good." "Com. io my rms, my foresls of th. nilJ.rnesi low. and whose """la " & lady's .ar. "I thank his members of Congress, and Judges of the pr.T.m..t. .iViX im.nniZSta. darling, said th. mother; " to rejoioe with powors of endurance led them to withstand lordship kindlr " answered tha ancient Supremo Court of the Confederate States, sboobb vasa from .xpMlr., .r oiberwli Pstmleaai OouklQK HleT.1. fnrnl.hfld wllh on..h.M of HBO, rats, a.kiog nf inch pertoa a rtBiiA-bbnt ITOOBHOLUBB Ib th. Uomp.oy, th.r.bf aot oulf gotllLg buk .T.nto.llf th. fab valvs of th. tOCk, h.t all PI.POBVIOHATI BIV1BBBDS Bl loUg Bt lh O'-Bipany n-maiBt ao org.B'Bt ob. Hootl B SAM Bod ICBB IBTBtlHIKV, Altboagh small to .oh ladlrldotl, hts aev.r Dufor bm of ft-r.dtolb.pBbU . Beroeaob .look-holder g.u a St.. for SSA.th.t la OB...... .L.i.n ml, Thil proposition was not formally adopt- I na Qf iobib ibbb bbj ou.1 or wood ttorr.; b.tidM, Petroleum Stove Oo. White Lead A Color Works JAilT AL Hfl'IM'It, BOO.eOO. 10,000 Shares, each t ; t $30 ROUT. SHIELD?, l'realdsal. J. B. DAOIIE, tlecrl tary. THB OHIO rBTBOLEUat STOVB COMPANY is org.Biaed oailar th. lawa or tb. gtau of Ohio, for Ih. pnrpOBaof glrlag to tba pablio .11 1st those who rejoioe, and weep with thos.who so manfully the fatigues of the great seven dam. "and if it. .. ii.. , fc. th'' roproientatives at foreign oourte, all weep, ie to obey our blessed Redeemer." I I'll I uke a littl. team altf" persons who left oifioial positions under the United Siates Government to aid in the re- years' struggle for independence. Tha ani-ii a ... m- I Among llio most influential causes of this Rev. H. M. Tuoper. a tradu.t. of N.-in. deairable reformation has bsen tne .stab- Th, .. hort. ,,,. . bsllioo, all who served in the rebel army Sominarr na ... . i.i..... .1. liohment of a national out-door sport, soma- I . . " r ' B ' aoov. me rank or uoionoi or in the navy rreedmen organised humble and and now a miinn. i lii liohment of a national out-door sport, some- ,. . ', , , r ' --., aoov. me rank or uolonoi or in the navy of Raleigh vrrltee thlt he ha. tnil" we w,te not P"""d "f lat. """'"'"g M. Cabinis, ft French physiol- above tha rank of master, and all persons ft regular Baptist Church of most " ,ea year g0, 0f 00urM our porlB ''- l'b muscles of th. leg. and arms guilty of treating cur prisoners oonlrary to id faithful Christians. He says: "' """"""j of foreign origin, as loss their power before thos. whioh support lbV!1.Io, of w."- ' . , , ., . . tra the .nnr a nt Knr.ti.nr) nf H.m.n ..J ........ vv This nroooSltlon Was not formallv adnnl "We have nurohaaed a buildln. lnt In pleasant part of the oily. I have advanoed in. money to pay for it, my savings while a soldier. Some on. must make tha aaorifioa. and I am on th. field, sea tha need, and cannot withhold. Wa ahall at onoa oom-menoe the work of building a Churob. I labor on boldly, trusting in God. endeavor ing to ehow to all that my work is one of love, inisconrse nas softened the hearts am uit ipont oi jugiana ox florman ana I ,i, i... . , , . , iiiwyuouiuu hh uu. .uruiuy buudi- i 7-- . V..,UM h ..k... .:.i. """t and these last sooner than the l.ri i,i it ... .....h ih.t n ,k.i,ik. hi. stock that ...nf.iiT mB.iKiiat a r.i.p.t.i ...,;,.,,u, n . u .,.. . . ... ... ..... " J " '.T -"-T. " " OB. Tbb Btof. ltaalf. In loot Ih. Ltreat of tb. nu.wi. luuimi vuo uaua B11U UO 11- BUUICU IO IBB reOOnStrUOUOU COmmilie. aa whole Oamn.nv. I. diffaMd thrnn.hnk .w.r.Tnwn. Iustrs.es this by th. case of persona who phat which would be generally acceptable ship la tbe wbole sui., and it. praotioai workiog r I ,.. .u. v x- . dallv wttBMHd bv .T.rv m.oiber or th. Do. sleeponhore.back.orwhll. they areatand- , B ., Thlt lndBcemaBt br ttw-k iav.taieBt of oonm ina- or walklno- Ha nnnn.i... .h.. .... .. '"H . vgni auurago ooaut a - -... lion, either lmmediata for our national gam. of base ball, as nlav- sd in aooordano. with the rules of th. "National Association of Base Ball Players," an originality as an Amerioan institution, as th. English can for their peculiarly nation- UNDKBRIdNID HAVINfl BOOnHTLT CUrehBMd ths Wni. I...n ITn... known t th. work, of MiBtrt. Bantam, Bills A Co., but mora lewutlp aa ib. PLoauli,WhlU bat and Oulor Worka," wonldr.ll th. attention of Deal-on and P.tnt-ra to oar rllOSNIX BUAHO or POBB WHITK I, HA 11, which I- '-.log n.d. nndar tb.MMo,.l aaperr-aloa of Mr. Bllt. wlto h.a had .n exp.rl.qot of iwenly.flve jearl io th. bibbb-faoior. of Lbap, and wt tuo maker of Ih. brand ao long and favorably known aa "Hariieos, Bills A Oo V Pa Wliiu ii-ad. W. thar.fi-r. M coo. Hd.Bt nl b. 1 g able to rurlth dvalvrt and ooaaam-on with. a attioleof . ' rUUE WHITE IJKAO which bll hne no laperlor, either I American or KoK'iafa mtnuftiotiir. , ., tvror bjr Ueftlrri In PIn (eavrkllf. ECKSTiiltf, IlILL-v sic CO., NO. B BURNKT sr., " " aptSriliB oaro.a I.Vt'l IV W ATI. BAKfeRY. np remota wa. pa. al sporl of borse-iaing. Without further i MnM 01 "8nt leeP "''. then the sense of oeived with very little favor, disoussion on this point, however, let it suf-1 taste, next smell, and, lastly, that of touch. I The question of th. immediate admission fics that th. gam. 01 bsae ball, aa perfected I 1 ..... u j ,. ' Tannease. waa not discussed, but such of some who were bitterly opposed to n at of Iat y'"' ia an American game, and one ,. , uu PPoa- member, as expressed themsalves at all the beginning " V PF oan honorably claim as our national out- UoB to n En8ll1' "".atrioal manager for ware decidedly in favor of it. U-tgrnSili,. I J . ' I . . 1 TT . ,, 1. ta nnrla.e.AA1 h.. .1.... . .1.. uuv. Dltuil. - - ...HntMUl. AAB WB. B.K.U II 110 OOUld ' IUIM Wft Ul. U1UD. As oriokot Thonghla for tba Afflicted. tM IV. V It.l . I I . .. . ni-nmtn.nl nl tUm uu..lM..l.. I A Christian was under manifold trials I base ball become to the AmtrintD In En. I "..la. Fr.nch, ad to - 1 , . . I UOtJ UttU UOUU1DS and aflliciions; and on on. oocasion, to a ind oricket has ", !,.".," . r. oouJ0Iln-s wim mm, n. re- any pastim. known to th. English people. ..vnotnoioiiowing cneot: On the cricket-field, and there only, the I look around, and I see how manv thara .... ..j .1 ...... 1 . . . at Uvwl MAAIA .1 1 VI IIHUDBUIi UlDtJb VU BUUII IVl lilli rh!.i7 n .T "Jy Ii.t.d the possession of courage and nerve, judg- than myaelf. Ilook,.ta,n,nd I aee how ment and skill, endurance and activity muoh corruption there ia in mv heart, wh nh .1 ,u2 . ,i , ,. , ... , , ,-. . t 1 ..vu. B n Luw tim u. BWU.riwri'jr. lu S,d,to b.', moJlM n? wh'l t"yoUl faot, more democratic institStion does not us iwi, a iuua ttvvmwa'a. ana i mn tn&t. i : a j t.i n .1.1 1 c 1 . . ."ha0.,1"""''"0li "? Popularity, the reo ... . . , . .... i.u.iw u, nuu I see that God whose hand overrules all ttvonta, and who doth all thing, wll.ly and wo... a iook oocwufora, ana 1 see rrom bow many troubles ha has delivered me, and how many sharp afflictions be has made to work together for my good. I look fmuard, 9 AOlVriOBU. 1U -ng- I .!.. , . , , , wu-utHi. rtti. u.ajv .u urupu.lllUll, VIBi ardent follower, than " Ti' tB.""" "' ht could, h. Senator Harri. and Representatives Cank- nuuoa in aiuiuut, ana reou.a m. follow- ling ana itoutweil, ing, which bears a hideous resemblance to " Kxeontlve Na.alon Deoaplla-th. soliloquy of th. Duk. of Gloster: loa Oame Bloekad Interesting Ba- "Now It th.wlat.rof nnr dl.nn... . .. DTOI-B. Th. Frenchman rendered 11: The Tribune's special says: The state- N.w....viBt.,ofoBrd.mn..,-. ment is whispered about this evening that Btad. lato hot vaddar. bv tt roa of Tork : (!!tt Is vat yon Mil se lltt.l. boy of Bltttr Tork) confl, a. ionua B m lop Bed aad taried at ai bottom, I ha Km,, am m. b.flk: eanaot b. off red lDd.flait.lv bv tha OomuanT.for wbea It it 000. all r.k.a, lonljra llmf tl BUmbor of tBarat ttoiug that ooeroo) fas win thoa bay the d.utb .ion., Tho wlahlog th. 920 In stook with their Ptove. shoold toad ln thalr ord.r. .t onoa, Moo.y m -y ba .aa . .0. riaa o. .u. UOBPHJ, ar All BIOTts Warranted. Offica aad 8.1. Bjoat No. lit North Blgh ttrett, v.innt.n. nut. 1 pgent. waBted. Bend ttamp for circular.1 febtlln J. B. DAQUf. Beo'y. the Senate, to-day, in executive session. disoussed soma other matters than military confirmations, whioh were passed upon without opposition. If rumor ie to he credited, the majority of tha Eon.'- tinniij. .nnonnoed ih.w no nomination orda of tho thousands of games played eaoh year, whioh includes tha names of lords as ar.ll a.,, nt nnlir. (li.i.ia. - i.ll lawyers; legislators as well as artisans, and "aoy itgi , ana tor iu should be oonnrmed, when made to fill a literateurs as mechanics and peasants, "dogshow-vow-v.wat roe plaoe made vacant by removal for opinion's ehow how greatly it has taken hold af that venivaikbyhla. al of any oompetent oflicar, who sup- ....i. rf .hi. 1. ,1.. For an extemnnrananiiB tpnn.l.ltnn ih!. . i .u. .1 . i . ..t t . . th lir Ji I ul' 1D . kum 1. .u. uu.iauHiia.ig ui I . putmi .u. .ivu.iuu u. Auunw nuuuoua in .....,li u i 1 :, , "".",'". "uu oriokot in ansiooratio England, how muoh was oonsiderod good, but h. waa not en- th. last Presidential oanvaBB. Tho Senate .,B. 1..... is oon- mora wiu it mark bass bail in d.mocratio gaged . v,lus "to, .uu .ui- wuiou, uj inose amtO' I America? lions, he is papering me. And when I have looked in all these directions, I do not think much of my afflietione. Let mo also well consider suoh text aa these: "Whom the lord loveth he chaatan-elh." Heb. 18 : 8. "Wa must, through snoh tribulation, enter into th. kingdom of God." Act. Id : 22. "Christ also suffered for us, leaving us an example that ye ehould follow iu his steps." 1 Peter 2: 21. , she r Tbe Admission of Utah. The Chisago Timn is wrathy, sharp and funny. It fisilea out in ft take-off thus : Tba people of Utah have applied for admission a. a Stat. Th. proper Congressional oomniittee ha th application before it, and la taking teaiimooy with referenoe to il. It i. quit, probable that th. people of Utah will not be admitted without a "change of heart." Utah will find th. road into th. Union t long on. to travel! " 1 ; ; ilrigham Young Win b. requested to r- peiygamy oy legal nudiata nelygamy by legal enactment. Snob was th. pulrid heap of life Afler this shall be don. h. will be required fermenting in this dismal spot. An un lucky tarn in the wheel of fortune, a ship arrived on Ih. day before, a disoharge from prison, or th. dark night, or some other banc., had past them here, to find a miser, able shelter. Every day brought some n.w , aoenmulation of suoh misery. Let him enter wto would, aleep who oould, apeak who dared; for it waa a plaoe of whispers. Tbe new-comers hastened to bury themselves iu th. mass, or trtsd to sesk oblivion )n sleep, sino. th.r. was none in th. dark- to repent of polygamy. Then will b. a oommittee at Washington who will go over him thoronghly. - H. will be required to testify that polygamy is abolished. H. will find it neoeesary to show that he a.v.r did believ. in polygamy. lis will b. ntoessi-tated to prove that there are no men in Utah who aver did believa in polygamy. Afler this has been dona, Utah will be admitted by tha present Congress, providing there are abundant guaranties that it will vote tbe Abolition uoxer. Progress r Loyal Feeling. W. watoh with anxiety, th. manifeata-tiona of Southarn feeling toward lha Gov ernment of tha United States. It is well Unrefleoling and prejudiced individual, who naver look below me aurfac. of things, may regard both oricket and base ball as "very good things for boys, perhaps, " or "Io pass away an idle hour or two on holli-dny;" but those who intelligently inreeti-gale subjects in regard to cause ftnd effect see in both these games, but espeoially in base ball, th. means to an and which had been sought for in vain for years past on mis side tne Atianuo. as a means or pbysi-oal cultivstion base ball is one of the most commendable in vogue. As a remedy also for many of th. evils aaoruing from th. immoral assooiatione the youths of our oities "CI T1X BleHTS" IM MARYLAND. The National Amerioan, published at Bsi Air, Harford oounty, Md., relates th. fol lowing: Alexander Riot, an industrious and res- New York. fieotabl. colored man of our county enlisted oases after one week's delay, and a report n the army and went to the war. He of 'he oase may b. expected by tbe Ccm- served his oountry faithfully, and in due mitteo to-day, but nothing was said by tims was honorably discharged. With that Sonator Morgan, and as there is no meet. is bound to sustain tbe President's earliest and best frisnds and supporters. New Tork Collertorablp. In the Senate, Mr. Morgan being on the Committee on Commeroe, when the oase of Dir. Bmyto. oam. up for action, was refer red to Gov. Morgan, as the Senator from It ia oustomary to report baok J. M. STUART & CO., Hannfutanri A Wholttal. and Bttall Onlan la Tin, Oojp jper, And Sheet-Iron Wa e ! Alto, Dealen la LAW'SON'S HOT AIR FURNACES, ,i,nl a,,-., Ormtei. Whlto Hsrbl ni HhlAlBM Hi an. Iron MutlM, o., o.j aod gala AgioU for P. P. 8tewrt' Largs Otod, Alr-TlgUt , COOHIISGt STOVE, And th. Noted AIiIsiaATO COAL COOKING 8T0VB. aurSeod ly BAMY & CONFECTIOiNERY. i I, . t ITlieo. Joiich, Wholesale ct Retail Dealer In BREAD, CRACKERS, ",' - CAKES, CANDIES, '( FRUITS, JvCTS.Ac. BJKERY & COSFmiOMM - tio. 2S8 Ronih High at., febST ta , Oolumbua- O. TRANSPORTATION. HOCKINO VALLEY Transportation Line. T BI-WEEKLY LINB IBOH COLUMBUS TO Lanoaattir. Laj.n. hal.ona.lla. Ilr..nr... BBd Afuuni at d all polott ob tb. Booking Oaoal. This Lino is oompoaed ul FIRST O Ia A 88 BOATS. Built exm-MsIr fortlta trade, ui Mnehinli and fib.Diitni OHrelron ttafliriirdniDtDrMBi.fi anfai. On aff " APRIL PI1IST, " avnrv nlh.f Tlia Xiaaxka.'b KNITTING MACUIIfE. " THB CR0WN1N0 TRIUMPH." TfMTi A STOflKIMO BDB3TANTIALLT 00 xa. rtiBia, antttiog in. b. i, thn toe tt It gc.i .l-.Dg. t.d BBrrowlna-nff .. aaia Bp tut owb woik, certificate of his manhood and patriotism he '"K ' the oommitte until next Thursday, koli. my tlto, from two loops forming a eord, Bp returned to th. oounty, who., quota h. had No action will b. had upon th. cas. during h.',Bon:b.rPor!Sip.:'d.;,d, V.uT.w i"d'., Wft " helped to fill, wilh the expectation of find- the interim. ! ri.t Wab th.Poail. Fl.t Weh, th. Fi.'a Bibboa known to all the readers of this paper that I and towns arc liable to, this gam. merits w. have strenuously ureed the soeedieat possible restoration of insurgent States to their old tlatiu in the Union, and that w. desir. tho return of peao. in all relations civil, sooial, andecolesiastioal. It will surprise some to know that we hav. pursued thi. oourse, while many at th. South nr. writing to us tbat w. ar. going too fast, th. indorsement of tbe best classes of the oommuiflty. The Kev. C. H. Everest, of J Brooklyn, Now York, in a ssrmon on physi cal education, whioh he lately delivered, mail, a special allusion to base bail as a gam. "whose rogulations are oaloulated to prevent tho ill feolings engendered by other games; and one, moreover, which serves to ing a family that belonged to him, and! 11 supposed that no objections of mo- which It would be his privilege to labor for ment will oa made to his confirmation, and educate. ...... dJnoaael lor tbe Trial of JIT. llavla. rftalitZwH? n. h. b.R.PPOin Wl"' Maaara. Evart,Clifford and Rousseau have . I l?,g th;t,whl1' h hiTB"n "glbg been retained by th. Government for th. in. Ditties or nis oountry, Ignatius Kut- tri&i of jtff rj,ia. t war hem vm. lodge bad appropriated hit fire ohildren, sou oiftimea to Jioid tbem during their en tire minority by virtue of indentured sp prenticeship suthorltod by the Orphsn'e uourt oe me oounty. vvun ftrespeot for Flat Web. and tb faoo Bibbad Vial Wah. with Mlndgoa, Ho oihr IWachtn In I be World md do nn tuiieoi ineM iDinn, It knlU Bhawli. Hooda. Hnblu. Jackati. Rr.k flut Uaptw, fiacka. Cklrla, Uodarablr a. Drawara. Boji'i t-olii, Obildrao'a Cloaka, Know Shot, Lg. giof, Qiovaa, Mlttena, and upward of forty dlffarant that th. .Ut. of feeling doe. not justify attract our young men from pl.oe. of bad Uwh cl "L, hta Infinit. orsdit. 11 oa immediate restoraUon. that ao muoh nf ihn ret.t.i. ..,,1 m ...nnlv ih. ri.hi kinrl n ... . w' wnlcu 0. tlm. """lt orsdit, Uioo The AdmlBsloii or Colorado by theBen- MA APO-DUlIlll. immediate restoration, that so much of the war spirit still prevails that the people oan not scud Union men to Congross. But w. har. felt tlist kindness was the most effectual means of conciliation, and that the war had forever settled the question of so-cession and nationality. We have bean willing to trust tha Sonth, and to aid in building up bar wast, places, and Io restore the harmony of th. Hopublio with th. Last poestoi. aciay. repute, and to supply the right kind of ex- eroiao and amusement. Tbia opinion has been practically indorsed by several olergy-mon of Philadelphia, who last year formed themselves into a baeo ball olub for the pur pose of healthful and moral reereation, in imitation of the hundreds of Eoglish persons who tako such delight in playing criog- et on toe commons oi tneir viusgos. But one of tbe strongest inducements to the poplarity of our Amerioan game of ball forbore any irregular assertion of his I t.rrl a V . n.ln- ,1,. .... .1.1. L. . I. . article!. tim. and place of trial hav. not b.e'n defi- KlSKlS'iS 1KJ Wl'tR,.! ia taa mots money maaipg ana Ubor-Mrlfg Invao tlorj or tha an. From lUU to 150 tvar Mint nrnflt on iIiiIa ia xne limes ipeotai autb: xne would be pnwuc. om0arirDiDgiroin eiotopar P - va at. waa. wa Ml 1 a 1 A? ATI. I . 1 IWTK. BUItl US LIUBIBl V ill DLakDia aftlld ta. Vl A AAV rt-al. riahts as a fatbar to hia own ohil.lr.n ht voiorauo were upon tba Boor to0 .,.,. - - - emp'oyed legal oounsel to procure ft writ of 1. 1 S, ,0-a,l' "PI1I,IM of J'mBrhlB.wAaBAv.otoworka.r.pr..nhJ. halitM eorpiu, to test tbe legalily of the in- : . : " . . " , .irm,m.uw. .. .,.. n,K.. i denture. That oounsel, instead of prooood- Ppa no' as gooa ss us inentls would Lj kh.vt.bo m.oii.n. MMiMornmio l)o, m.nation to oppose it; eome for the same reason that Mr. Sumner did, others beceuse it is certain to provoke anothor veto, which will still further alienate the President But w. ar. pained by the neceasily of is, that it is an cut-door sport, and almost saying that the information wa get from the South does not encourage us to labor in thia direction. Particularly ia the int.Ul-genoa unfavorable in regard to the imnutert of lb. South. A pastor in ono of the Southern Statee writes as follows :- "It is ft fnot that tho ministers of th. Qospel In the South who have generally returned to their parishes, nr. almost without exoeption bitterly opposed to the Govern ment, and are exerting ail their influence against loyally and reconstruction. It ia tbo only on. which ladies oan countenance and witness. American ladies have hitherto beeu shut out from all tho pleasures Incident to ouch games as base ball and cricket, and as the gratification of witnessing manly contest for superiority in courage, activity, good temper, and judgment, by tho low oharaoter of tho surroundings ant aesooiations of most of the sports moo indulgo in. In bsse ball, however, we have an exoeption in their favor, which they have not bosn slow to take advantage of, as ing by legal process, communloated with Ratledge, and he, after a full conference with the connsol of Rioe, informed the counsel that ho did not wish tho tronbl. and expense of a suit and directed him to inform Rico that he oould have his children if he would oome and get them. The infor- -ate atiu ..t tuaiii- inainier. n-nnnii.t...... ., motion wa communicated to llio.. no f."""anaut. in.sam.represent.li, want la ih. hnt... nf Bt.H.ti.. t. d..it.i.. "u .... oenaio aa in. great state 01 ISO stated th. purpose r,f his coming, received J,01' ' B11'8,1, unjust an. his ohildren from Rutledge, and look th.m ble on ",y mM .rounds i to his homo. Attorney fivnrral Miteed Oi the opinion of candid loyal men, that Ihey th. pitronage of tho hundred, of tho fair aro .xerting a stronger influence in that box who have for three or four years past dlreotion than any other olass of men in gtuoed baBO ball matchei with their wel-the South. come presence oan testify. If our national "Theeo ministers teaoh their people not to I pastime had uo other recommendation than listen to any propositions for aid in sun- this, this faot would suffice to give it a pov- plying preaching for th. destitute; of I nlarity no other recreation oould compete organising anu iurn.sn.ng ounaay oonoois, I witn m me es.imaiion or Americans. un-Hiii those funds be put into the hands of true southern mon, go tor tbeir support and to advance tneir principles. "A Christian gentleman, who hasreoentlv visited eveiy town in nine oountirs in thia State, on business, and made thia a speoial subjeot of inquiry, saye it wae the testimony of the best men everywhere that no Northern missionary or 8. S. agent would bo safe from personal violence. Th. spirit is bitter, very bitter, and so far as I can s.., grows worse. Of what use is It, then, that w. at th. North advocate the restoration of the South Bas. ball, as now played by the clubs of the National Association, ia a New York institution, and it differs materially from tha game in vogue in Now England, the latter of which within the past five years has almost become obsolete. During the lata war, th. soldiers of both oontesling ariuiea matlo the game a meana of recreation ln their oao.pl and priron grounds, and by this means has it been introduced into the South. Thia year th. organisation of ft baseball olub ftt the University at Virginia will giro the gam. an impelu. in th. South which will soon lead to its being oellent reason that to give Colorado, with ion great Stale of Now and unjustifia- whatever. 'oiullis; Weat. Some months aflorwards Rutledge bcoame Attorney General Speed h: gon. West impressed with the belief that if the writ of 10 ,eoruu benim, which is somewhat habcai nrput had been issuod, and he had impaired by close aud unremitting appli- contested it, he might hav. maintained his 0111011 t0 business. olaiin to tho ohildren. Accordingly he Tho Trial or Jvir. linvla a ot Yet De-sent word to Rioe that if tlrtohildron wer. terminer! On. not returned, he (Rutledge) would send him The detsrmination of Ih. lime and placo (Rico) to tho penilonliary. To this Rios of lha trial of Jeff. Davis will not be made only replied that he had violated no law, until Mr. Speed's return, in all probability, and etood upon legal rights. A few days unless something ocours whioh is not now afiorward his ohildren were seised and ta- anticipated by the administration, ken baok to the house of Rutledge, and niaeontlnnnnee of Temporary Leana. Rioe was seliod, handouffod and lodged in The Seor.tary of the Treasury, believing mLln j . . . that (he time has come when the Ooveru-The Grand Jury heard tha ttatamenta of ment ahould no longer be in the position of Rutledge, and found fiv. different indiot- a borrower of money, to-day ordered the ut.u.n touo .ur .... .ui,., against moe, Assistant U. 8. Treasurers to discontinue for .ntloing apprentices tO run awar. tha pnnanllnn nf .1. nn.ita fnr l.mnnr..r. .nd The Great English Remedv. rr.na.van. rl ..111 nih.w. rVa. .!.. I SIR JAMES CLARK'S CELEBRATED I FEMALE PILLS. eri PROTECTED to her ttatut in th. Uhion, when the olergy on. of the most p ipular recreation, ia whioh still preach hostility to th. Government, the leisure olasscs ot tho "land of chivalry" and tho Mayor of Mobil., with th. appro- are pron. to indulge, .spatially ao as it is When th. oases were oalled for trial at the last term of our Court, the friends of Rice were satisfied that he oould not have a fair and impartial trial here, and by their advice, Rico made that affidavit, and th. oases wer. sent to Baltimore oounty. There the eases came up for trial last week, and all th. foregoing facta were developed Able oennsol were employed to assist tbo State's Attorney, hut lha Court did not hesitate to say that Rica hsd violated no law, and to diraot that ha be discharged. btiion of his fellow oitiiens, pays publio honors to ' President" Davis? To us it seems wonderful that men can eipeot to hava tha oonnaanco, support ana material aid of tha Norib, while they thua continue to nurture ana spread a iceiing of disloy alty and positive hostility to the Government under whioh they live. W. with that w. had mora avideno. of ft better stale of things. If any of our readers in th. Soulh will writ, to ns and give A plan for th. vault at Arlington Cema-t.ry in whioh th. remain, of the Union dead from th. Virginia battle-fields ar. to bi deposited, has bean approved by the Quarlrrmaetcr-Qenernl, and Colonel M. Luddington, Chief Quartermaster-General of the Department of Washington, ha. ad- a eport which tho Southern be'.ies .an pa trooii. as do tbeir oompscra ofth. Eoglish nobility the oricket matobe. of the oollegl-ana of Oxford and Cambridge. In fact, whether base ball be regarded as a desirable means of physical exercise an exoiting game for tbe masses, or ft reoreation whioh ia devoid of every reasonable objection that vertlssd for proposals for ita construction. tha molt fastidious moralists could inter- It will ba made under ground, oiroular in pose, it ia equally to be commended to the ahapa, with an interior diameter of twenty patronage of every American oitiien, north, feet and ooverod with a hemispherical ut facta to ahow that th. ministers are south, east, or west, a. ths most fltiug gam. arch or dome. On th. top of thi. dom. will studying things that make for pcac. and for a national out door sport. be an elliptical opening, oovered with a brotherly lov. between the Nona and th. In this city the National, Potomac, Jeffer- atone tablet, whioh will be above the sur- 8outb; that eueh sentiments aa Mayor aon, and Union aro the leading baaa ball face of th. ground, and on which proper Withers ar. not prevalent: tbat there i. a organisation, of th. District, and besides inscriptions may b. plaoed. Th. vault gradual improvement in th. ton. af feeling these there are s.voral prominent organi- will b. divld.d into fonr compartm.nls toward th. Union and th. Government, satlons among the junior fraternity. On by two oross walls Intcraeotlog at right w. .nan o. more man g.aa to lay tnem do- neanesnay, ine zotn, in. nationals play a angiva, lore ma ptmno. ivory interesting game together on me If our ahurohee are to b. reunited, and I President's grounds, and on Friday a grand the Southern State, represented in Con-' orloket mttch takes plan. attbe same local- loans. District BnlTrnge Bill. The Senate will take up the Universal Suffrage bill for the District of Columbia next week, so say several Republicans. PrenlilcntlBl jromlnntlon. Among the nominations Bont to the Sen ate thi. morning by th. President, were the following : uol. II. H. ltrewster, to be United Stales Dial riot Attorney for Kentucky; C'has. W. Webster. Deputy Postmaster, Fort Plain, New Yoik;' D.Gregg, Receiver of Publio Money, Carson Cily, Nevada; John A. Clark, Surveyor General, Territory of New Mexico; and the following Reoeivcrs of Land Ofnoei, vu : Knyal Ituok, Nebraska Ciiy; Clim. R. Dorsey, Brownsville, Nebraska. and Wm. F. Sweessy, Omaha, Nebraska. Uen. Uraut'a vlslt Ie Mlebmond. Th. Herald's speoial says : Gen. Grant'a visit to Richmond was marked with many pleasing incident, and gratifying results. People flcocked to see him in large numbers from ourioiily, no doubt, but during nis stay ne waa ouueu. upun respeouully by such persons ss Robert Ould, ex-robel Com. ""J' ',? w1"!" mi..ioPn.r for exoh.ng, of prisoner; G... 51 surest during tb. present gensratio of lir- it. Wath. Chronica. W. sometimes oongratulat. ourselves at Ut. moment of waking fromfttraubl.il ed becoming feellnge and asntimcnts. dream; i( may be so th. moment after death, railroad company pluced oar at hit dispo- Joseph Anderson, ot the Tredegar Iron Workr, Alayor niayo, ucne. nickham and Henningsen; Judges Lyon, and Meredith, Hill. Carter, Waller, Harri.on, and manv other influential oillieno. Tha ladies also oalled upon Mrs. Grant fre ly, and every one who called manifest ing LET 01 "",AU&cJ3XJr&A PATENT. FftgPABgn mon a rngscniprioii or " '' SIB JAMES CLARK, M. D., Physician extraordinary to tha Queen. rpBIS IMVALDABLB MEDIOINI IB UKFATL. X INUIn th. cunt of all thot. painful and d.a-gnrnna dlaeaaM t. wnloh tha famale (onitltutton It nbjeot. It roodaratot all .xopaa .nd removal all ob- rno .loo., bbb a .peony onre mj bt rolled on. To Married Ltulleu It It pecnli.rlj eoltnd. It will, In Mm i bring ob the monthly period with regularity. Bach bottle, prloa On. Dollar, boar a th. Oovern-men8tamp of Greet Riilalu, to preront counter, teltl OATJTIOW. !TV Hid thould nt.t 6a lui,, by rrmal dtrinf Oa FIH.1T THHKS MONTHS ot iVflntnacp. a. ,ar, r u brie oa Bfucarrloff, oal al any otto lira, Uu, era mtft. Io all obh. ol N.rvont and Hplaal Affection, Palfla IB the Ba k and Llmba. y.tlgu on alight i-orllon, P.I.ll.tloa of tha Heart, IlT.teilca, aid Whites, thaao Filla will afoot a car. wb.n all oluer meant hava fallal; and.ltnoaaSBanw.rnil remedy, do notooolata irjB,oalomel,antiBionj, or aai thing bartml to tb. oouatttotloii. lull dilution. In th. pamphlet .ronnd eaoh pack age, whhh .hoold be oanfolly pnearvod. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. Bole agent for the Catted Blatn and Canada, , JOH MllttUI. IT Conrtl.nd ttrett, Mow York, H. B. 11 and t poet.ua tami enolottd to aay anthorlted Agent, will Inenro a botti.. oonUluina 60 rtlli, by retoro mall. aoglT aom eod.w ly EYE AND EAR. !L rrlT'rmwlir J.' M' Y'i cllT1y traata VW Vy"ia.Dc.i. Dlir-iiN oi th ICtaa, and lo- aatala Aa-tlMnlail Kmmm a.. ' . . . n iT et vvtimuYT rA IB, TBAT treat, (oppoalU tha hlo. AlaufivBUhM end Ear, for 40 oat. laoftdly IS6S. A Boat will I naned doIo'. Freigh r lFd at our Wanhoui" at Faat aad Weat ard of National Brldg. Offlot 87 Watt Broad atratvl. . , U. JITOH ft tOJi. mrao t( Oolumbua, ChlUUothe &. Pottsmoutb And Fast Freight' JLIne. . ' J "".'Tit ' n uj ! - mi PABtHENGlB PACKKTfl LKAVK TBOf FOOT of Broad itrcct on Mnndaja, Wtidoradayi aod frldaji 'ortlrcl'Talle.Ohilllootbft.JMper, KaTarly ShtrooTilU and Porta mouth, ooonactlng at Porth month with SttatDttia ur Pomeroj. Oliljollf( Irooton and all Laadinga on tha Polo Blvar. Tha nuala aro provided with lion Hatai for tho t'anamtiikn of Taloablo Packc, PaaMt-sata wltl Aad tt.t h moit cnpifnrlabla aad pleaDt , mods o( trat 11 pg ijowia Scioto Trolgb rpoalvod at onr Wrchonit t Ktit n4 Wet vA of National Brlde. ' ffl a-f7 WMt Broad ttraat. H.VIIOfleOM. rSOif - ,f .... . .. v. Corsot and MtirtJfmporium, " ' " 1VO M K4ST ToWlf BT. WB WOUI-D IMVITB TBB LADIBB OT CO-LUMBUti to oall and x -mlnaonr new at I Amrlean ori(, wartantcd whaieboaa, arid made from tna boat mrttfrtal. 8tanT'lia,s'Iondon Royal Cord" aod 'A lilbit, both .plain and liolilj avbroldnrad. i - , 1 Al'O, Mndrttu oym Cor act BkJri Hnp-ftOrtrt whico It an axceUvnt (lorret for InTalida. nni la BuvrAl f liked. Wt kcrp on hand balk rreDchandUaraanOvraatii alaoi tba tofeaat atvlo ' o o p B It i r1 t 'm m hVLtidlM In attrndanoa. '" '' ' 1 AUEaTS WANTHD-100 L6m. (M aall Madam Voj'a Ouxaat Skirt bupportnr. I. II. nAUHUIKB UU. laprfl 1m Ho. 84 Batt Town at.. Off - iOTICK TO CONXl(i(OJK8. SKA LCD PBOrOBAtS WTLt Bl RVBIVBD I J tba nndanlcned at tba offloa of too Board of Publio Worm, In lb city of Ouluabua, on At OH- ' , iuj ovtu ui nyt', ioiih. uoiwirii i.uty tiimra ui 9 and 4 o'clock P. M. of aatd Amf, tbr the dollwtDf and treaklu lime atone oa tha National Ko"d ba- iwetn ina iihir ana jasta miiei. aa nnntnoraa weat. from Who) I dc. The amonnt to be eUred on tho different milaa ! aa followa: On mi lea Ui VZl, Ui and 123. W rod ech: on mlloa 1 and li 80 rod ach; nn mlla UQ, 131 ard, IS'i, M rodaWh; on miMi lt, 13ft, 1J, 187 and 1:18, 8& rod naoh. Bidder mtut atate the prloe per rod o(.)100 oablo fat. Ths atone to be del We ted at lutili place on the d ft rant ml It a. aa tha Realdtnt Bt.ir Inner mv di a If net, and to be brtken to a aiae not exceeding Iwor ooaofa in weight. Blda for ill breaklbi aad del Iter Id mnit ba aeparata. , . i ne right to nj ot mat ia rean' Ted. H'JIN a; Oclm BLAIR. BeaJiltflt Bifffre-r. ibaa, March 80, 1800 . AeiHi td Sttfman oopjr.1 Ladies desiring a OJear and fc1 . "B 111 V I k tfL. ir , lnlnTITlA.TTl VVi 1 1 free of poetagslo any aaJra FttHRlB A ROnilUSON-a i Wonitrrfnl Fxtfrmlnatorf D'ath Io At i a, Mie, Koacbes, Ante, ttdbnv And all klnda ot iaot. WbolMala Doaol, e)and 61 Fnlt-in rr-t. Brook ljn, N. T. HABH1S A 81QLKB, WhnlsssAiila Ati'ra fin n n Bold at Retail by 0. Bo nan Co. aud J, B. uooa, Tfali dellt-htfnl Toilet artlo' I aa oo equal lor Pre. erring aad Baaatliylng tb Oomp'exlon nhd Hkts, Bold bj Brttfgleti every where. .M , Mt, 74 FirLTOM STBKETfl IV. Y. lbudemjoootny WALMT STREET HOUSE, CINCINNATI, OBIO: THIS HoUBB BAS BBOBNTLT BRtN BB rURNIBIIED and thorongbly ranavward Tha patronagaof lha IraTellug pobllo la reipeot fatly ao uaiiva. . m. uaiiiaaiikn uu., Proprletora. TAKaL'tt OHAMPIOM BUOAB IVA FOB ATO XJ will make IRO gal loot Byrop p day o twrstrcbonraltHeord of wood, and a better arttola wlb lea lbrr than ny now In oat. . Will fornlih tb Avaporatora. or eell ilng'a righta Io ui, for 110. Bend for ao tl lot rate clronlar, giving partlenlara. - - M DIAL, - lWblWaodMWSSm ' Baoyrai, Ohio. |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn84028628 |
Reel Number | 10000000028 |
File Name | 0419 |